Natural phenomena, including human language, are not just series of events but are organized quasi-periodically; sentences have structure, and that structure matters.
Howard Lasnik and Juan Uriagereka “were there” when generative grammar was being developed into the Minimalist Program. In this presentation of the universal aspects of human language as a cognitive phenomenon, they rationally reconstruct syntactic structure. In the process, they touch upon structure dependency and its consequences for learnability, nuanced arguments (including global ones) for structure presupposed in standard linguistic analyses, and a formalism to capture long-range correlations. For practitioners, the authors assess whether “all we need is Merge,” while for outsiders, they summarize what needs to be covered when attempting to have structure “emerge.”
Reconstructing the essential history of what is at stake when arguing for sentence scaffolding, the authors cover a range of larger issues, from the traditional computational notion of structure (the strong generative capacity of a system) and how far down into words it reaches to whether its variants, as evident across the world's languages, can arise from non-generative systems. While their perspective stems from Noam Chomsky's work, it does so critically, separating rhetoric from results. They consider what they do to be empirical, with the formalism being only a tool to guide their research (of course, they want sharp tools that can be falsified and have predictive power). Reaching out to skeptics, they invite potential collaborations that could arise from mutual examination of one another's work, as they attempt to establish a dialogue beyond generative grammar.
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This book is licensed under a Creative Commons License (CC BY-NC-ND). You can download the ebook Structure: Concepts, Consequences, Interactions for free.
- Title
- Structure: Concepts, Consequences, Interactions
- Subtitle
- Concepts, Consequences, Interactions
- Publisher
- The MIT Press
- Author(s)
- Howard Lasnik, Juan Uriagereka
- Published
- 2022-12-13
- Edition
- 1
- Format
- eBook (pdf, epub, mobi)
- Pages
- 248
- Language
- English
- ISBN-10
- 0262544547
- ISBN-13
- 9780262371995
- License
- CC BY-NC-ND
- Book Homepage
- Free eBook, Errata, Code, Solutions, etc.
Contents Preface 1. Investigating Structure 1.1 Weak and Strong Generative Capacity 1.2 The Formal Language Hierarchy 1.3 Beyond Phrasal Description 1.4 Toward a Better Understanding of Complex Structuring 1.5 Structure at the Bottom 1.6 Concluding Remarks on “Mixed” Systems 2. Learnability Matters 2.1 The POS Classic Argument 2.2 The POS Angle 2.3 A “Sane Person” at Work 2.4 Bayesian Rationality 2.5 On the Poverty of the Challenge 2.6 Where Does Structure Come From? 2.7 Conclusions 3. Locality and Beyond 3.1 Classic Locality Effects 3.2 Toward Successive-Cyclic Wh-Movement 3.3 Expanding on Locality Effects 3.4 Construal Relations 3.5 Beyond Locality Effects 3.6 Reconstruction Effects 3.7 Gate Effects 3.8 Parasitic Gaps, Tough Movement, and Beyond 3.9 Conclusions 4. Reducing Reduced Phrase Markers 4.1 Reduced Phrase Markers 4.2 Reducing Reduced Phrase Markers 4.3 Bistrings 4.4 Orthogonal Labels and the Construction of Files 4.5 In Search of Dependencies within and across Chains 4.6 Tentative Conclusions 5. Structural Variation, Language Acquisition, and Machine Learning 5.1 Three Kinds of Variation 5.2 Likes and More in Language and Elsewhere 5.3 Features, Similarities, and Beyond 5.4 A Sketch of the Dynamical Model 5.5 In Search of Dark Variation 5.6 Tentative Conclusions 6. Conclusions and Future Research Notes Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter Chapter Chapter References Index