Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: language from the body
- 1 The universe of gesture
- 2 The nature of gesture
- 3 Are signed and spoken languages differently organized?
- 4 Is language modular?
- 5 Do we have a genetically programmed drive to acquire language?
- 6 Language from the body politic
- 7 The origin of syntax: gesture as name and relation
- 8 Language from the body: an evolutionary perspective
- References
- Author index
- Subject index
4 - Is language modular?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: language from the body
- 1 The universe of gesture
- 2 The nature of gesture
- 3 Are signed and spoken languages differently organized?
- 4 Is language modular?
- 5 Do we have a genetically programmed drive to acquire language?
- 6 Language from the body politic
- 7 The origin of syntax: gesture as name and relation
- 8 Language from the body: an evolutionary perspective
- References
- Author index
- Subject index
Summary
Faculty psychology is getting to be respectable again after centuries of hanging around with phrenologists and other dubious types.
Jerry Fodor, The modularity of mindMODULAR VERSUS ASSOCIATIONIST THEORIES OF LANGUAGE
There is a recent version of the nativist theory of language that makes use of the modern concept of modularity, a concept derived from the construction of electronic devices, especially computers. According to modular theories, the brain can be understood as a processing device that contains a number of innately differentiated components, modules, each of which is responsible for a separate subroutine or type of computing activity. Modular theories are in contrast with associationist theories, which assume that the brain is relatively homogeneous and its interconnections are relatively unconstrained but become differentiated primarily through the organism's interactions with the environment. Modular theorists ordinarily cite regularities in human behavior, especially language, as evidence for innately determined mechanisms; while associationists have traditionally cited the great diversity of human languages and cultures as evidence for plasticity.
Precursors of modular as well as associationist theories of the causation of human behavior have very long histories in Western thought. Modular theories have been associated with the idealist tradition in philosophy (largely French), and associationist theories have been linked with the empiricist tradition (largely English). The fundamental issue is the opposition of the notion that all ideas (concepts) must be pre-programmed or built in, as against the observable plasticity and flexibility of the organism.
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- Gesture and the Nature of Language , pp. 92 - 120Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1995