Nullifying the Argument from Design - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 29
About This Presentation
Title:

Nullifying the Argument from Design

Description:

The rat the cat the baby stroked chased ate the cheese. The horse raced past the barn fell. ... by the plain between the mountains in the north of the island ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:22
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 30
Provided by: Universite4
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Nullifying the Argument from Design


1
Nullifying the Argument from Design
  • Wolfram Hinzen
  • Universiteit van Amsterdam
  • w.hinzen_at_uva.nl

2
The Argument from Design
  • In crossing a heath, suppose I pitched my foot
    against a stone and were asked how the stone came
    to be there, I might possibly answer that for
    anything I knew to the contrary it had lain there
    forever. But suppose I had found a watch upon the
    ground, and it should be inquired how the watch
    happened to be in that place, I should hardly
    think of the answer which I had before given,
    that for anything I knew the watch might have
    always been there.
  • (Paley, Natural Theology, 1802)

3
Neo-Paleyanism
  • Throw out God, but keep purpose.
  • Look at structures in organisms as providing
    engineering solutions to given environmental
    problems
  • The human mind has evolved because more complex
    cognitive faculties
  • enhance the organisms chances of survival.

4
Language as an adaptive solution
  • FL is complex and specialized, serves the end of
    communication with admirable effectiveness, and
    has an ineliminable genetic component.
  • Natural selection is the only known secular force
    to craft such functional complexes in a series of
    small mutations.

5
Circularity in the adaptationists suggestion
  • The language faculty evolved in the human
    lineage for the communication of complex
    propositions (Pinker and Jackendoff, 2004)
  • Unclear evidence for propositionality before
    sentences mere thought procedures?
  • Conveying recipes, hunting techniques, gossip,
    or reciprocal promises require language.

Hey, Jim! Lion! You there, I here You master,
I slave.
6
Four perspectives on explanation in Tinbergens
scheme
  • Mechanistic
  • Ontogenetic
  • Functional (Fitness)
  • Evolutionary history

7
Methodology of historical narrative
  • In the absence of relevant paleontological and
    comparative data, one adaptationist hypothesis
    will simply replace the next
  • where such claims are testable, it is w.r.t.
    fractions of language, not language as a whole
  • Questions of adaptive function are independent of
    the question of mechanisms.
  • An observation about what something is good for
    does not yet answer questions concerning how that
    beneficial effect is achieved.

8
Language
  • An abstract core of computational mechanisms
    central to language and probably unique to
    humans.
  • The communication system used by us.

9
What is language for?
  • Whats the sense of this question?
  • language evolved and is clearly useful for
    communication
  • answer unneeded for the detailed study of neural
    function and computation
  • has certainly not led to a fruitful study of the
    latter
  • Function of the whole system need not transfer to
    the functions and origins of the component parts.

10
Some functions
  • Public
  • thought and information sharing (and withholding)
  • maintaining social relationships
  • Private
  • problem solving
  • focussing attention
  • reference
  • meta-linguistic
  • expressiveness
  • memory aid
  • enhancing social competence by rehearsing the
    thoughts of others
  • shaping thought (Whorf)
  • poetic function

11
Communication
  • if nobody spoke unless he had something to say,
    the human race would very soon lose the use of
    speech. (Somerset Maugham)
  • communicative needs would not have provided any
    great selective pressure to produce a system
    such as language with its crucial relation to
    development of abstract and productive thinking
    (Luria 1974)

12
Human and non-human communication
  • Comprehensive study of comparative communication
    irrelevant to the formal study of language
    (Hauser 1997, 64).
  • Link between both communication systems is the
    expression of emotional state.
  • Why are there so many different languages?

13
Some puzzling design features
  • to a linguistic outsider such as a Martian, the
    sentence/NP distinction, far from fostering
    communicative efficiency, could well seem a
    point-less encumbrance and its universality among
    humans quite mystifying (Carstairs-McCarthy
    1999, 27).
  • Impossible structures
  • Who did he say how he loved?
  • How did he say who he loved?
  • Impossible words
  • John shelved the books.
  • John booked on the shelf.

14
How usable is language?
  • Partially!
  • Massive ambiguity rules of language even create
    it.
  • Endless confusions of interpretation
  • near miss, which means nearly a hit, not nearly a
    miss
  • I missed (not) seeing you last summer (I expected
    to see you but didnt)
  • The rat the cat the baby stroked chased ate the
    cheese.
  • The horse raced past the barn fell.

15
Ancient and recent parts of language (after
Hauser, Chomsky, Fitch, Science 2002)
16
Is FLB is an adaptation for communication?
  • Mechanisms entering into FLB fundamentally shared
    with non-human animals, while serving no
    communicative functions there.
  • No good case for selection for either speech
    perception or production in the human lineage
    (exception vocal imitation).
  • Remarkable abilities to lock onto particular
    property (tool, colour, geometry, food, number,
    perhaps mind, self, etc.) in non-humans.

17
Intentional/referential abilities
  • Concepts ? reference.
  • Signalling in rhesus monkeys (not in chimps) a
    dubious precursor to words.
  • -no intentional reference/communicative intent.
  • -most human words not associated to any specific
    function
  • -no straightforward word-thing relation.

18
Is FLN perhaps an adaptation, then?
  • Little evidence in non-human animals for a
    capacity to generate a unbounded range of
    discrete meaningful expressions.
  • Its a good car, but they dont sell it.
  • Its a good car, but they dont tell it.
  • Cats that killed rats that ate the malt that lay
    in the house that ()
  • 1,2,3,
  • 0N, s(n)N for nN.

19
Recursion in FLN
  • We find communication systems
  • discrete and finite (e.g., rhesus monkey call
    types)
  • infinite but continuous (e.g., bee dance, bird
    calls)
  • Recursion as such found in animal navigation,
    foraging.
  • ((((the hole) in the tree) in the glade) by the
    stream)
  • in the forest by the plain between the mountains
    in the north of the island
  • --gtPossibility that FLN is empty The argument
    from design nullified

20
Different types of unboundedness
  • Rules operating locally
  • (AB)n
  • ABABAB
  • John runs and runs and runs...
  • Rules generating unbounded dependencies
  • AnBn
  • AAABBB
  • Johns mothers sisters brothers letter.
  • who did John say the man who told the barkeeper
    who loved the dog he killed adored?

21
Do monkeys do it?
  • Cottom-top tamarins spontaneously
  • master finite-state grammars
  • (FitchHauser 2004)
  • Hierarchical organization in Cebus apella
  • (McGonigle, Chalmers and Dickinson 2003)
  • Still, Human may simply be different.

22
A counterproposal for the study of the evolution
of language (Chomsky 1998, 2000, 2001 Hinzen
2005)
  • Human language design characterized by three
    kinds of conditions
  • unexplained conditions
  • interface conditions conditions the language
    faculty has to satisfy to be usable at all
  • general properties of organic systems (in this
    case, combinatorial and recursive ones)

23
Designing a human the minimalist hypothesis
  • FLN is what is structurally inevitable?
  • LEX LEX
  • D-structure
  • S-structure
  • PHON SEM PHON SEM

24
Non-redundancy, locality, conservativity
  • What do you give a gift to Mary?
  • John seems that it was told t that Mary left.
  • John was seen t
  • Which book
  • do you say
  • that he thinks
  • that he has read t?

25
A vision for the evolution of human nature
  • The less structure there is to FLN, the less we
    have to explain by external constraints.
  • All the facts of language appear to refute
    Minimalism. (Chomsky 2000)
  • But facts are (just) that facts!

26
Message
  • Innate traits (parts of human nature) do not per
    se force an adaptationist explanation.
  • As of now, adaptationist hypotheses on what
    language is for have predicted virtually none
    of the empirical properties of language.
  • Moreover, the question what something is for
    does not actually need to have an answer at all.
  • There is an absolute need in language evolution
    for the comparative method.

27
The human as document
28
The human as artifact
29
The human as crystal
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com