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Nativism: Noam Chomsky

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Title: Nativism: Noam Chomsky


1
Nativism Noam Chomsky
2
John Locke (1632-1704) Essay Concerning Human
Understanding
  • Since it is the understanding that sets man
    above the rest of sensible beings, and gives him
    all the advantage and dominion which he has on
    them it is certainly a subject even for its
    nobleness, worth our labour to inquire into..
  • Introduction, p.26 (Dover publication)

3
Chapter 1 No Innate Speculative Principles
  • There is nothing more commonly taken for granted
    than that there are certain principlesuniversally
    agreed upon by all mankind which therefore,
    they argue, must needs be the constant
    impressions which the souls of men receive in
    their first beings, and which they bring into the
    world with them, as necessary and really as they
    do any of their inherent faculties..

4
  • ...It would be sufficient to convince
    unprejudiced readers of the falseness of this
    supposition, if I should only showhow men,
    barely by the use of their natural faculties, may
    attain to all knowledge they have, without the
    help of any innate impressions (p.37-38)

5
The concept of Infinity- competing explanations
  • A Rationalist claim (Descartes) would be that a
    finite and limited creature, such as a human, has
    no capacity to learn of infinity from his
    experiences in a finite environment. And since,
    being finite, he could not invent the idea of
    infinity, this idea has to be innate in him.
  • Descartes claims God has given it to us at birth.

6
  • An Empiricist claim (Locke) would argue that we
    can indeed acquire the idea of infinity through
    experience one should add to a number the number
    1, for instance, and then add to it another 1,
    and another 1, and find out that there is no
    constraint on continuing adding. In this way one
    acquires the concept of Infinity.

7
  • Every one that has any idea of any stated
    lengths of space, as a foot, finds that he can
    repeat that idea and joining it to the former,
    make the idea of two feet and by the addition of
    a third, three feet and so on, without ever
    coming to an end of his additions (p.278).
  • This is an empiricist explanation, which does not
    require presupposing innate knowledge.

8
  • This argument of universal consent, which is
    made use of to prove innate principles, seems to
    me a demonstration that there are none such
    because there are none to which all mankind give
    an universal assent (p.39).
  • Take, as an example, the law of contradiction-
    the most basic rule of logic- which the
    rationalists claim to be innate. Locke argues
    that it is an example of laws which

9
  • Are far from having an universal assentfor,
    first, it is evident, that all children and
    idiots have not the least apprehension or thought
    of them. (p.40)

10
  • Are children indeed knowledge-free, in the
    same status as idiots?

11
Nativism
  • Main question what is the cognitive code?
  •  
  • Infant is born with complete world knowledge
  •  
  • Infants count
  • Infants have a concept of objects
  • Infants have physics concepts
  • Infants have language

12
Nativism
  • Evidence for the claim of complete world
    knowledge
  • Youngsters learn an extremely complex system
    (language) effortlessly
  • Youngsters learn an extremely complex system
    (language) in a short amount of time
  • Youngsters do not need instruction to learn their
    mother tongue

13
Nativism
  • Do youngsters who are born deaf can learn an
    impoverished language at a level that is higher
    than the level they hear?
  • Youngsters develop Creole from pidgin
  • Infants do not hear grammar they hear a string
    of words and infer the syntactic rules language
    (impoverishment of the stimulus)
  • Infants often hear ungrammatical sentences, yet
    they learn the grammar

14
Nativism Learning Paradox
  • Fodors learning paradox one learns something
    only if one knows it in advance
  • To learn a language you have to know that
    language in advance
  • What you know is at a higher level than what you
    learn

15
Nativism
  • In the case of language, infants are born with
  • a universal grammar (UG) - a data base of
    grammar
  •  language acquisition device (LAD) - hypothesis
    tester

16
Nativism
  • If the child is born with a LAD and no UG, he
    doesnt have anything to hypothesize on
  •  
  • If the child is born with a UG and no LAD, he
    cannot hypothesize about the language

17
Nativism
  • The UG is the cognitive code.
  •  
  • Unique to humans
  • Universal for humans
  •  
  • If one can describe it, one has cracked the
    cognitive code.

18
Nativism
  • Relations between learning and development
  • Only learning (deductive)
  • No development
  • Similar to classical behaviorism

19
Nativism Language Acquisition Device
  • hypothesize the grammar in the language you are
    exposed to
  • see if the hypothesis fits the grammar
  • if yes, continue with the hypothesis
  • if no, make a new hypothesis

20
Nativism
  • If that is how children learn language, it is
    impossible, in principle, to develop to a higher
    level
  • How can you hypothesize something that is not
    already there?
  • Nativists say you cannot

21
Nativism
  • As a consequence, it is best to build the most
    powerful system so that it is there in infancy
  •  

22
Argument between Piaget and Chomsky
  • CHOMSKYS POINT
  • Chomsky One cannot construct more powerful
    structures because hypothesis testing cannot take
    place at a level that is higher than ones
    highest level
  • e.g., conservation a child cannot hypothesize
    conservation if he is at the intuitive stage

23
Argument between Piaget and Chomsky
  • Chomsky One cannot construct more powerful
    structures because hypothesis testing cannot take
    place at a level that is higher than ones
    highest level
  • Fodors learning paradox
  • e.g., conservation a child cannot hypothesize
    conservation if he is at the intuitive stage

24
Piaget Rebuttal
  • Piaget I dont have to accept hypothesis testing
    as the mechanism for learning
  • I believe children learn and develop through
    disequilibrium

25
Piaget Rebuttal
  • I can describe learning and development in
  • Child development (ontogeny)
  • History of disciplines (Piaget Garcia Kuhn)
  • My system allows me to describe two disparate
    developments ontogeny and historical development

26
Piaget Rebuttal
  • You, the nativists cannot describe the
    development of disciplines in history in terms of
    innate modules within humans
  • Bottom line
  • I can describe two developments and you can
    describe one
  • I dont believe the description you give to
    language acquisition

27
Nativism Modularity
  • 1. Encapsulation - it is impossible to
    interfere with the inner workings of a module.2.
    Unconscious - it is difficult or impossible to
    reflect on the operations of module.3. Speed -
    modules are very fast.4. Shallow outputs -
    modules provide limited output, without
    information about the intervening steps that led
    to that output.

28
Nativism Modularity
  • 5. Obligatory firing - modules operate
    reflexively, providing predetermined outputs for
    predetermined inputs regardless of
    thecontext.6. Ontogenetic universals - modules
    develop in a characteristic sequence.7.
    Localization - modules are mediated by dedicated
    neural systems.

29
Nativism Modularity
  • 8. Pathological universals - modules breakdown
    in characteristic fashion following insult to the
    system.9. Domain specificity - as discussed
    above.
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