Advances in Biolinguistics - The Human Language Faculty and Its Biological Basis

(Ron) #1

Bateson, Patrick, and Kevin N. Laland. 2013. Tinbergen’s four questions: An appre-
ciation and an update. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 28(12):712–718.
Berwick, Robert C., Ang ela D. Friederici, Noam Chomsky, and Johan J. Bolhuis.



  1. Evolution, brain, and the nature of language. Trends in Cognitive Sciences
    17(2):89–98.
    Berwick, Robert C., Kazu o Okanoya, Gabriel J. L. Beckers, and Johan J. Bolhus.

  2. Songs to syntax: The linguistics of birdsong. Trends in Cognitive Sciences
    15(3):113–121.
    Bickerton, Drek. 2009. Ad am’s tongue: How humans made language, how language
    made humans. New York: Hill and Wang.
    Boeckx, Cedric. 2013. Biol inguistics: Forays into human cognitive biology. Journal
    of Anthropological Sciences 91:1–28.
    Boeckx, Cedric, and Koji Fu jita. 2014. Syntax, action, comparative cognitive science
    and Darwinian thinking. Frontiers in Psychology 5: Article 627.
    Bolhuis, Johan J., Ian Tatt ersall, Noam Chomsky, and Robert C. Berwick. 2014.
    How could language have evolved? PLoS Biology 12(8): e1001934.
    Bolhuis, Johan J., Ian Tatt ersall, Noam Chomsky, and Robert Berwick. 2015. Lan-
    guage: UG or not to be, that is the question. PLoS Biology 13(2): e1002063.
    Buckner, Cameron. 2013. Mor gan’s canon, meet Hume’s dictum: Avoiding anthro-
    pofabulation in cross-species comparisons. Biology and Philosophy 28:853–871.
    Chomsky, Noam. 2005. Three fac tors in language design. Linguistic Inquiry 36:1–22.
    Chomsky, Noam. 2007. Of minds a nd language. Biolinguistics 1:9–27.
    Chomsky, Noam. 2013. Problems of projection. Lingua 130:33–49.
    Clarke, Julia. 2013. Feathers bef ore fl ight. Science 340:690–692.
    Corballis, Michael C. 2002. From h and to mouth: The origins of language. Princeton:
    Princeton University Press.
    Fitch, W. Tecumseh. 2005. The evol ution of language: A comparative review. Biology
    and Philosophy 20:193–230.
    Fujita, Koji. 2014. Recursive merge and human language evolution. In Recursion:
    Complexity in cognition, ed. Tom Roeper and Margaret Speas, 243–264. New
    York: Springer.
    Greenfi eld, Patricia M. 1991. Langua ge, tools, and brain: The ontogeny and phy-
    logeny of hierarchically organized sequential behavior. Behavioral and Brain Sci-
    ences 14(4):531–595.
    Greenfi eld, Patricia M. 1998. Languag e, tools, and brain revisited. Behavioral and
    Brain Sciences 21(1):159–163.
    Grodzinsky, Yosef. 2004. Variation in Broca’s region: Preliminary cross-methodolog-
    ical comparisons. In Variation and universals in biolinguistics, ed. Lyle Jenkins,
    171–193. New York: Elsevier.
    Hauser, Marc. D., Noam Chomsky, and W. Te cumseh Fitch. 2002. The faculty of
    language: What is it, who has it, and how did it evolve? Science 298:1569–1579.
    Herman, Louis M. 2010. What laboratory re search has told us about dolphin cogni-
    tion. International Journal of Comparative Psychology 23:310–330.
    Jackendoff, Ray. 2010. Your theory of lang uage evolution depends on your theory
    of language. In The evolution of human language: Biolinguistic perspectives, ed.
    Richard K. Larson, Viviane Déprez, and Hiroko Yamakido, 63–72. Cambridge,
    UK: Cambridge University Press.
    Marantz, Alec. 1997. No escape from syntax: Don’t try morphological analysis in
    the privacy of your own lexicon. University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in


Fallacies in evolutionary linguistics 151

Linguistics 4(2):201–225.
Free download pdf