The Third Factor in Phonology

This article attempts to investigate how much of phonology can be explained by properties of general cognition and the Sensorimotor system — in other words, third-factor principles, in support of the evolutionary scenario posed by Hauser et al. (2002a). It argues against Pinker & Jackendoff’s (2...

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Main Author: Bridget Samuels
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Biolinguistics 2009-09-01
Series:Biolinguistics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://biolinguistics.eu/index.php/biolinguistics/article/view/86
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spelling doaj-443840aaaf724026b30230435eb56b0e2020-11-25T01:57:55ZengBiolinguisticsBiolinguistics1450-34172009-09-0132-335538269The Third Factor in PhonologyBridget Samuels0Harvard UniversityThis article attempts to investigate how much of phonology can be explained by properties of general cognition and the Sensorimotor system — in other words, third-factor principles, in support of the evolutionary scenario posed by Hauser et al. (2002a). It argues against Pinker & Jackendoff’s (2005: 212) claim that “major characteristics of phonology are specific to language (or to language & music), [and] uniquely human,” and their conclusion that “phonology represents a major counterexample to the recursion-only hypothesis.” Contrary to the statements by Anderson (2004) and Yip (2006a, 2006b) to the effect that phonology has not been tested in animals, it is shown that virtually all the abilities that underlie phonological competence have been shown in other species.http://biolinguistics.eu/index.php/biolinguistics/article/view/86evolution of languagephonologythird factor
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bridget Samuels
spellingShingle Bridget Samuels
The Third Factor in Phonology
Biolinguistics
evolution of language
phonology
third factor
author_facet Bridget Samuels
author_sort Bridget Samuels
title The Third Factor in Phonology
title_short The Third Factor in Phonology
title_full The Third Factor in Phonology
title_fullStr The Third Factor in Phonology
title_full_unstemmed The Third Factor in Phonology
title_sort third factor in phonology
publisher Biolinguistics
series Biolinguistics
issn 1450-3417
publishDate 2009-09-01
description This article attempts to investigate how much of phonology can be explained by properties of general cognition and the Sensorimotor system — in other words, third-factor principles, in support of the evolutionary scenario posed by Hauser et al. (2002a). It argues against Pinker & Jackendoff’s (2005: 212) claim that “major characteristics of phonology are specific to language (or to language & music), [and] uniquely human,” and their conclusion that “phonology represents a major counterexample to the recursion-only hypothesis.” Contrary to the statements by Anderson (2004) and Yip (2006a, 2006b) to the effect that phonology has not been tested in animals, it is shown that virtually all the abilities that underlie phonological competence have been shown in other species.
topic evolution of language
phonology
third factor
url http://biolinguistics.eu/index.php/biolinguistics/article/view/86
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