Introduction | p. 1 |
The science of language and mind | |
Language, function, communication: language and the use of language | p. 11 |
On a formal theory of language and its accommodation to biology; the distinctive nature of human concepts | p. 21 |
Representation and computation | p. 31 |
More on human concepts | p. 33 |
Reflections on the study of language | p. 36 |
Parameters, canalization, innateness, Universal Grammar | p. 39 |
Development, master/control genes, etc. | p. 46 |
Perfection and design (interview 20 January 2009) | p. 50 |
Universal Grammar and simplicity | p. 59 |
On the intellectual ailments of some scientists | p. 65 |
The place of language in the mind | p. 69 |
Chomsky's intellectual contributions | p. 76 |
Simplicity and its role in Chomsky's work | p. 80 |
Chomsky and Nelson Goodman | p. 86 |
Human nature and its study | |
Chomsky on human nature and human understanding | p. 95 |
Human nature and evolution: thoughts on sociobiology and evolutionary psychology | p. 103 |
Human nature again | p. 108 |
Morality and universalization | p. 113 |
Optimism and grounds for it | p. 118 |
Language, agency, common sense, and science | p. 124 |
Philosophers and their roles | p. 129 |
Biophysical limitations on understanding | p. 132 |
Epistemology and biological limits | p. 133 |
Studies of mind and behavior and their limitations | p. 138 |
Linguistics and politics | p. 152 |
Appendices | |
I-concepts, I-beliefs, and I-language | p. 153 |
The several uses of "function" | p. 157 |
On what is distinctive about human nature (and how to deal with the distinction) | p. 176 |
Chomsky on natural science | p. 183 |
Of concepts and misguided theories of them, and why human concepts are unique | p. 186 |
Semantics and how to do it | p. 206 |
Hierarchy, structure, domination, c-command, etc. | p. 232 |
Variation, parameters, and canalization | p. 239 |
Simplicity | p. 243 |
Hume on the missing shade of blue and related matters | p. 247 |
Syntax, semantics, pragmatics, non-Chomskyan and Chomskyan | p. 250 |
An internalist picture of how concepts 'work' | p. 255 |
Commentaries | p. 2621 |
Bibliography | p. 303 |
Index | |
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