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The Development of Language : Acquisition, Change, and Evolution

Part of the Blackwell/Maryland Lectures in Language and Cognition series
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How and why do languages change over time? Could the way an individual child develops affect aggregate language change?

What do the mechanisms of change tell us about the evolution of language in our species?To answer these questions, David Lightfoot looks closely at young children.

A child develops a grammar on exposure to some triggering experience.

A small perturbation in the trigger may entail a different grammar in the next population of speakers, with dramatic effects.

This "sensitive dependence on initial conditions" is the key to explaining how languages change, and why they change in fits and starts.The "cue-based" approach to language acquisition presented here is a radical departure from formal models of language learning.

Lightfoot challenges conventional understanding by showing that language change is essentially contingent - unpredictable but explainable: and he contests how far natural selection enables us to understand the evolution of the language faculty in the species.

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Product Details
Wiley-Blackwell
0631210601 / 9780631210603
Paperback / softback
401.93
23/11/1998
United States
English
xii, 287 p. : ill.
23 cm
postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More