Parlanti impossibili, plausibili, reali. Prospettive biolinguistiche in filosofia del linguaggio / Impossible, Possible and Real Speakers. Biolinguistic Perspectives in the Philosophy of Language

  • Antonino Pennisi
  • Alessandra Falzone
Keywords: Darwinian Biolinguistics, evolution of speech, performativity, cerebrocentrism, Evo-Devo

Abstract

In the recent years Life Sciences have been a test in many fields that investigate specific human capacity. Cognitive science of language are animated by a debate on the role that the data coming from biology may play in the definition of mental functions. Classical cognitive science has led both to a dualism between mechanical-morphological components and psychic components (e.g. the typical chomskyan approach) and to a spasmodic search of those brain areas responsible for the “unique” capacity of human language (recursion syntax, semantic creativity, etc.) that could be called “cerebro-centrism”. In contrast with this classical paradigm, we support the idea that a “biological” perspective allows a more appropriate explanation of what language is and how it functions. In particular, by applying evolutionary developmental biology in the study of spoken language, we will show how the biological nature of the speaker could affect the type of the function. This approach can clarify some classical oppositions in the study of language evolution. The biology of the speaker, determined by all of the central and peripheral structures and social practices in which it is exercised, is the set of functional possibilities that the sapiens may present as a linguistic animal.

References

ANDERSON, Stephen R., LIGHTFOOT, David W. (2002), The language organ. Linguistics as Cognitive Physiology, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

BALARI, Sergio, LORENZO, Guillermo (2013), Computational phenotypes: towards an evolutionary developmental biolinguistics, Oxford Univerity Press, Oxford.

BERTOSSA, Rinaldo C. (2011), «Morphology and behaviour: functional links in development and evolution», in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, n. 366, pp. 2056-2058.

BERWICK, Robert C., CHOMSKY, Noam (2016), Why only us. Language and Evolution, Cambridge MA, The MIT Press.

BREUKER, Casper J., DEBAT, Vincent, KINGENBERG, Christian Peter (2006), «Functional evo-devo», in Trends in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 12, n. 9, pp. 488-492.

CARROLL, Sean B. (2005), Endless Forms Most Beautiful: The New Science of Evo Devo and the Making of the Animal Kingdom, W. W. Norton & Company, New York.

CARROLL, Sean B. (2008), «Evo-Devo and an Expanding Evolutionary Synthesis: A Genetic Theory of Morphological Evolution», in Cell, n. 134/1, pp. 25-36.

CHRISTIANSEN, Morten H., CHATER, Nick (2008), «Language as shaped by the brain», in Behavioral and Brain Sciences, n. 31, pp. 489-558.

CORBALLIS, Michael (2015), «What’s left in language? Beyond the classical model», in Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, vol. 1359, pp. 14-29.

CRAIK, Fergus, BIALYSTOK, Ellen (2006), «Cognition through the lifespan: mechanisms of change», in Trends in Cognitive Sciences, vol. 10, n. 3, pp. 131-138.

DI SCIULLO, Anna Maria, BOECKX, Cedric (2011), The Biolinguistic Enterprise, Oxford Univerity Press, Oxford.

FALZONE, Alessandra (2014), «Structural Constraints on Language», in Reti, saperi, linguaggi. Italian Journal of Cognitive Sciences, n. 2/2014, pp. 247-266.

FITCH, W. Tecumseh (2000), «The evolution of speech: a comparative review», in Trends in Cognitive Science, n. 4, pp. 258-267.

GERKEN, LouAnn (2006), «Decisions, decisions: infant language learning when multiple generalizations are possible», in Cognition, n. 98, pp. B67-B74.

GOULD, Stephen (1977), Ontogeny and Phylogeny, Harvard University Press.

HAUSER, Marc D., CHOMSKY, Noam, FITCH, Tecumseh (2002), «The Faculty of Language: What Is It, Who Has It, and How Did It Evolve?», in Science, vol. 298, pp. 1569-79.

HICKOK, Gregor (2011), «The Role of Mirror Neurons in Speech and Language Processing», in Brain & Language, n.116, pp. 103-104.

HICKOK, Gregor (2014), The Myth of Mirror Neurons. The Real Neuroscience Of Communication and Cognition, W.W. Norton & Company.

IACOBONI, Marco (2008), «The role of premotor cortex in speech perception: Evidence from fMRI and rTMS», in Journal of Physiology, n. 102, pp. 31-34.

KERN, Sophie, DAVIS, Barbara (2009), Emergent complexity in early vocal acquisition: Cross linguistic comparisons of canonical babbling, in CHIROTAN, I. COUPÉ, C., MARSICO, E., PELLEGRINO, F. (eds.), Approaches to Phonological Complexity, Phonology and Phonetics Series, Mouton de Gruyter, Berlin.

LIEBERMAN, Philip (2012), «Vocal tract anatomy and the neural bases of talking», in Journal of Phonetics, n. 40, pp. 608-622.

LOVE, Alan C. (2006a), «Evolutionary morphology and Evo-devo: Hierarchy and novelty», in Theory in Biosciences, n. 124, pp. 317-333.

LOVE, Alan C. (2006b), «Explaining Evolutionary Innovations and Novelties: Criteria of Explanatory Adequacy and Epistemological Prerequisites», in Philosophy of Science, vol. 75, n. 5, pp. 874-886.

LEVINTON, Jeffrey S. (2001), Genetics, Paleonthology and Macroevolution, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

MINELLI, Alessandro (2007), Forme del divenire. Evo-devo: la biologia evoluzionistica dello sviluppo, Einaudi, Torino.

MÜLLER, Gerd B, NEWMAN S.A. (2005), «The Innovation Triad: An EvoDevo Agenda», in Journal of Experimental Zoology, n. 304B, pp. 487-503.

PENNISI, Antonino, FALZONE, Alessandra (2014), «Residuals of Intelligent Design in contemporary theories about language nature and origins», in Humana.Mente, vol. 27, pp. 161-180.

PENNISI, Antonino, FALZONE, Alessandra (2010), Il prezzo del linguaggio. Evoluzione ed estinzione nelle scienze cognitive, Bologna, Il Mulino.

PULERMÜLLER, Friedemann, GARAGNANI, Max, WENNEKERS, Thomas (2014), «Thinking in circuits: toward neurobiological explanation in cognitive neuroscience», in Biological Cybernetics, n. 108(5), pp. 573-93.

SEYFARTH, Robert M., CHENEY, Dorothy (2014), «The evolution of language from social cognition», in Current Opinion in Neurobiology, n. 28, pp. 5-9.

SKOYLES, John, SAGAN, Dorion (2002), Up from Dragons: The Evolution of Human Intelligence, McGraw-Hill, New York.

SOMEL, Mehmet, LIU, Xiling, KHAITOVICH, Philipp (2013), «Human brain evolution: transcripts, metabolites and their regulators», in Nature Reviews Neuroscience, n. 14, pp. 112-127.

SPELKE Elizabeth, KINZLER Katherine (2007), «Core knowledge», in Developmental Science, n.10, pp. 89-96.

TALLINEN, Tuoma, CHUNG, Jun Young, ROUSSEAU, François, GIRARD, Nadine, LEFÈVRE, Julien, MAHADEVAN, L. (2016), «On the growth and form of cortical convolutions», in Nature Physics, pp. 588-593, DOI: 10.1038/nphys3632.

TOMASELLO Michael (1999), The Cultural Origins of Human Cognition, Harvard, Harvard University Press.

VALLEE, Richard B., TS, Jin-Wu (2006), «The cellular roles of the lissencephaly gene LIS1, and what they tell us aboutbrain development», in Genes & Development, n. 20, pp.1384-1393, DOI: 10.1101/gad.1417206.

WOOL, David (2006), The Driving Forces of Evolution: Genetic Processes in Populations, Boca Raton, Science Publisher, Taylor and Francis Group.

ZMARICH, Claudio (2010), Lo sviluppo fonetico/fonologico da 0 a 3 anni, in S. BONIFACIO, L. HSVASTJA STEFANI, L’intervento precoce nel ritardo di Linguaggio. Il modello INTERACT per il bambino parlatore tardivo, FrancoAngeli, Milano, 2010, pp. 17-39.

Published
2016-10-31
How to Cite
Pennisi, A. and Falzone, A. (2016) “Parlanti impossibili, plausibili, reali. Prospettive biolinguistiche in filosofia del linguaggio / Impossible, Possible and Real Speakers. Biolinguistic Perspectives in the Philosophy of Language”, Rivista Italiana di Filosofia del Linguaggio, 00. Available at: http://rifl.unical.it/index.php/rifl/article/view/358 (Accessed: 24November2024).

Most read articles by the same author(s)