How Could Language Have Evolved?
Author(s)
Bolhuis, Johan J.; Tattersall, Ian; Berwick, Robert C.; Chomsky, Avram Noam![Thumbnail](/bitstream/handle/1721.1/90974/Bolhuis-2014-How%20Could%20Language%20H.pdf.jpg?sequence=4&isAllowed=y)
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The evolution of the faculty of language largely remains an enigma. In this essay, we ask why. Language's evolutionary analysis is complicated because it has no equivalent in any nonhuman species. There is also no consensus regarding the essential nature of the language “phenotype.” According to the “Strong Minimalist Thesis,” the key distinguishing feature of language (and what evolutionary theory must explain) is hierarchical syntactic structure. The faculty of language is likely to have emerged quite recently in evolutionary terms, some 70,000–100,000 years ago, and does not seem to have undergone modification since then, though individual languages do of course change over time, operating within this basic framework. The recent emergence of language and its stability are both consistent with the Strong Minimalist Thesis, which has at its core a single repeatable operation that takes exactly two syntactic elements a and b and assembles them to form the set {a, b}.
Date issued
2014-08Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Linguistics and PhilosophyJournal
PLoS Biology
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Citation
Bolhuis, Johan J., Ian Tattersall, Noam Chomsky, and Robert C. Berwick. “How Could Language Have Evolved?” PLoS Biology 12, no. 8 (August 26, 2014): e1001934.
Version: Final published version
ISSN
1545-7885
1544-9173