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41
FULL ISSUE
In: Biolinguistics, Vol 13 (2019) (2019)
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42
Uma perspectiva etiológica sobre a função natural da Faculdade da Linguagem / An etiological perspective on the natural function of the Faculty of Language
In: Revista de Estudos da Linguagem, Vol 27, Iss 3, Pp 1531-1570 (2019) (2019)
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43
Biologically Based Merge of Wh-questions in the Bamboo Slips of Tao Te Ching
In: PAROLE: Journal of Linguistics and Education; Volume 9 Number 2 October 2019; 111-116 ; 23380683 ; 2087-345X (2019)
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44
The internal, the external and the hybrid: The state of the art and a new characterization of language as a natural object
In: Glossa: a journal of general linguistics; Vol 3, No 1 (2018); 22 ; 2397-1835 (2018)
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45
From Ethological Linguistics to Animal Linguistics and Ecolinguistics
Augustyn, Prisca. - : Association canadienne de sémiotique / Canadian Semiotic Association, 2018. : Érudit, 2018
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46
The internal, the external and the hybrid : the state of the art and a new characterization of language as a natural object
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47
Abordagem Isomórfica: a articulação entre o léxico e a sintaxe na emergência da linguagem ; Isomorphic Approach: articulating the lexicon and syntax in the emergence of language
Nobrega, Vitor Augusto. - : Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da USP, 2018. : Universidade de São Paulo, 2018. : Faculdade de Filosofia, Letras e Ciências Humanas, 2018
Abstract: Investigamos, nesta tese, as bases filogenéticas do léxico humano e o modo como elas foram articuladas às habilidades combinatoriais no curso da evolução. Partimos de uma avaliação da interação entre o léxico e a sintaxe com o intuito de determinar quanto da derivação sintática é dependente de informações lexicais e, em que medida, as propostas disponíveis são coerentes com o desenvolvimento evolutivo humano. Nosso objetivo principal é fornecer uma hipótese para a interface entre o léxico e a sintaxe que seja explicativa e evolutivamente adequada. Para esclarecer as discordâncias empíricas e teóricas observadas, propomos, em contrapartida, uma nova abordagem para a gramática, a Abordagem Isomórfica. Argumentamos que o léxico humano decorre do agrupamento de um conjunto de sistemas pré-adaptados que evoluíram separadamente um sistema conceitual-intencional, um sistema sensório-motor e um sistema funcional, cuja integração é um produto direto da emergência de um sistema combinatorial recursivo. Operacionalmente, buscamos, com essa abordagem, reduzir a influência lexical na formação de um objeto linguístico, na tentativa de assegurar uma isonomia funcional entre o léxico e a sintaxe. Motivamos, adicionalmente, a exaptação de um sistema responsável por derivar as unidades discretas empregadas pelo sistema combinatorial, a que damos o nome de sistema funcional. Compartilhado com primatas não humanos, o sistema funcional justifica-se pelo paralelismo entre a denotação rígida das vocalizações de alerta de primatas não humanos e o conteúdo fixo das unidades funcionais da linguagem humana. Propomos, com base nessa correlação, que os mecanismos cognitivos subjacentes aos sistemas de vocalização primata, instanciados pelo sistema funcional, correspondem aos precursores filogenéticos dos traços formais. Funcionalmente, essa nova abordagem incorpora a visão neoconstrucionista de que a derivação da estrutura sintática independe de informações codificadas nas entradas lexicais. Tal conjectura assegura a autonomia funcional da sintaxe, o que, como resultado, nos aproxima do caminho para se ir além da adequação explicativa. ; We investigate, in this dissertation, the phylogenetic bases of human lexicon and how they were articulated with combinatorial abilities in evolution. We begin with an evaluation of the interaction between lexicon and syntax to determine how much of the syntactic derivation is dependent on lexical information, and to which extent the available proposals are consistent with human evolutionary development. Our main goal is to come up with an account for the lexicon-syntax interface that is both explanatory and evolutionarily adequate. In an attempt to eliminate the observed empirical and theoretical divergences, we propose a new approach to grammar, the Isomorphic Approach. We claim the human lexicon arouse from the assemblage of a set of pre-adapted systems that evolved separately viz., a conceptual-intentional, a sensory-motor, and a functional system, whose integration is a by-product of the emergence of a recursive combinatorial system. Operationally, we seek, with this approach, to reduce the burden of lexical influence in the derivation of a linguistic object, with the view to establish a functional isonomy between lexicon and syntax. Furthermore, we motivate the exaptation of a pre-adapted system responsible for deriving the discrete units that feed the combinatorial engine, which we call functional system. Shared with non-human primates, the functional system finds justification in the parallel between the rigid denotation of non-human primate alert calls and the fixed content of human language functional units. We propose, based on this conjecture, that the cognitive mechanisms underlying non-human primate alarm-calling systems, suggestively made available by the functional system, comprise the phylogenetic precursors of human language formal features. Functionally, this new approach incorporates the neo-constructionist view that the derivation of a syntactic structure is independent of lexically encoded instructions. With this premise, we aim to ensure the establishment of an autonomous syntax, which, as a result, brings us closer to the road toward a level of explanation that goes beyond explanatory adequacy.
Keyword: Abordagem Isomórfica; Animal communication; Biolinguística; Biolinguistics; Comunicação animal; Evolutionary linguistics; Isomorphic Approach; Léxico; Lexicon; Linguística evolucionária; Sintaxe; Syntax
URL: https://doi.org/10.11606/T.8.2019.tde-13022019-162354
http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8139/tde-13022019-162354/
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48
Das sprachbegabte Tier : Grundzüge des menschlichen Sprachvermögens
Taylor, Charles; Schulte, Joachim (Übersetzer). - Berlin : Suhrkamp, 2017
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UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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49
Creole studies : phylogenetic approaches
Bakker, Peter; Birchsenius, Finn; Levisen, Carsten. - Amsterdam : Benjamins, 2017
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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50
A Program for the Genetics of Grammar
In: BIOLINGUISTICS; Vol. 11 (2017): Special Issue—50 Years Later: A Tribute to Eric Lenneberg’s Biological Foundations of Language; 295-324 ; 1450-3417 (2017)
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51
50 Years Later: A Conversation about the Biological Study of Language with Noam Chomsky
In: BIOLINGUISTICS; Vol. 11 (2017): Special Issue—50 Years Later: A Tribute to Eric Lenneberg’s Biological Foundations of Language; 487-499 ; 1450-3417 (2017)
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52
Andrea Moro, I confini di Babele. Il linguaggio e il mistero delle lingue impossibili, Bologna, Il Mulino, 2015, pp. 360
In: APhEx_16_2017_Garello.pdf (2017)
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53
A Program for the Genetics of Grammar
In: Biolinguistics, Vol 11, Iss SI (2017) (2017)
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54
50 Years Later: A Conversation about the Biological Study of Language with Noam Chomsky
In: Biolinguistics, Vol 11, Iss SI (2017) (2017)
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55
A Program for the Genetics of Grammar
In: Biolinguistics, Vol 11, Iss SI, Pp 295-324 (2017) (2017)
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56
50 Years Later: A Conversation about the Biological Study of Language with Noam Chomsky
In: Biolinguistics, Vol 11, Iss SI, Pp 487-499 (2017) (2017)
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57
Variation in the pronunciation/silence of the prepositions in locative determiners
In: Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; Vol 2 (2017): Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; 22:1–15 ; 2473-8689 (2017)
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58
Darwinian biolinguistics : theory and history of a naturalistic philosophy of language and pragmatics
Pennisi, Antonino. - Cham : Springer, 2016
Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft
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59
Why only us : language and evolution
Berwick, Robert C.; Chomsky, Noam. - Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, 2016
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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60
Why only us : language and evolution
Chomsky, Noam; Berwick, Robert C.. - London, England : The MIT Press, 2016
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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