Language evolution and complexity considerations: The no half-Merge fallacy

Publication date

2020-01-23T15:45:43Z

2020-01-23T15:45:43Z

2019-11-27

2020-01-23T15:45:43Z

Abstract

Recently, prominent theoretical linguists have argued for an explicit scenario for the evolution of the human language capacity on the basis of its computational properties. Concretely, the simplicity of a minimalist formulation of the operation Merge, which allows humans to recursively compute hierarchical relations in language, has been used to promote a sudden-emergence, single-mutation scenario. In support of this view, Merge is said to be either fully present or fully absent: one cannot have half-Merge. On this basis, it is inferred that the emergence of our fully fledged language capacity had to be sudden. Thus, proponents of this view draw a parallelism between the formal complexity of the operation at the computational level and the number of evolutionary steps it must imply. Here, we examine this argument in detail and show that the jump from the atomicity of Merge to a single-mutation scenario is not valid and therefore cannot be used as justification for a theory of language evolution along

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3000389

PLoS Biology, 2019, vol. 17, num. 11, p. e3000389

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3000389

Recommended citation

This citation was generated automatically.

Rights

cc-by (c) Martins, Pedro Tiago et al., 2019

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es