How do we get language?
In the 1960s, the US linguist and philosopher Noam Chomsky offered
what looked like a solution. He argued that children don’t in fact learn
their mother tongue – or at least, not right down to the grammatical
building blocks (the whole process was far too quick and painless for
that). He concluded that they must be born with a rudimentary body of
grammatical knowledge – a ‘Universal Grammar' – written into the human
DNA. With this hard-wired predisposition for language, it should be a
relatively trivial matter to pick up the superficial differences
between, say, English and French. The process works because infants have
an instinct for language: a grammatical toolkit that works on all
languages the world over.
At a stroke, this device removes the pain of learning one’s mother
tongue, and explains how a child can pick up a native language in such a
short time. It’s brilliant. Chomsky’s idea dominated the science of
language for four decades. And yet it turns out to be a myth. A welter of new evidence has emerged over the past few years, demonstrating that Chomsky is plain wrong.
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