Recursive misrepresentations: A reply to Levinson (2013)
Author(s)
Legate, Julie Anne; Pesetsky, David; Yang, Charles
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Levinson 2013 (L13) argues against the idea that ‘recursion, and especially recursive center-embedding, might be the core domain-specific property of language’ (p. 159), citing crosslinguistic grammatical data and specific corpus studies. L13 offers an alternative: language inherits its recursive properties ‘from the action domain’ (p. 159). We argue that L13’s claims are at best un-warranted and can in many instances be shown to be false. L13’s reasoning is similarly flawed— in particular, the presumption that center-embedding can stand proxy for embedding (and clausal embedding can stand proxy for recursion). Thus, no support remains for its conclusions. Furthermore, though these conclusions are pitched as relevant to specific claims that have been published about the role of syntactic recursion, L13 misrepresents these claims. Consequently, even an empirically supported, better-reasoned version of L13 would not bear on the questions it claims to address.
Date issued
2014-06Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Linguistics and PhilosophyJournal
Language
Publisher
Muse - Johns Hopkins University Press
Citation
Legate, Julie Anne; Pesetsky, David and Yang, Charles. “Recursive Misrepresentations: A Reply to Levinson (2013).” Language 90, 2 ( June 2014): 515–528 © 2014 Linguistic Society of America
Version: Final published version
ISSN
1535-0665
0097-8507