Title: Nullifying the Argument from Design
1Nullifying the Argument from Design
- Wolfram Hinzen
- Universiteit van Amsterdam
- w.hinzen_at_uva.nl
2The 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)
3Neo-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.
4Language 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. -
5Circularity 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.
6Four perspectives on explanation in Tinbergens
scheme
- Mechanistic
- Ontogenetic
- Functional (Fitness)
- Evolutionary history
7Methodology 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.
8Language
- An abstract core of computational mechanisms
central to language and probably unique to
humans. - The communication system used by us.
9What 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.
10Some 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
11Communication
- 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)
12Human 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?
13Some 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.
14How 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.
15Ancient and recent parts of language (after
Hauser, Chomsky, Fitch, Science 2002)
16Is 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.
17Intentional/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.
18Is 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.
-
19Recursion 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
20Different 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?
21Do 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.
22A 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)
23Designing a human the minimalist hypothesis
- FLN is what is structurally inevitable?
-
- LEX LEX
- D-structure
- S-structure
- PHON SEM PHON SEM
24Non-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?
25A 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!
26Message
- 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.
27The human as document
28The human as artifact
29The human as crystal