Language and
Mind
Linguistic Contributions to the Study of Mind (Future)
Noam Chomsky (1968)
Source: Language and Mind publ. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc.,
1968. One of the six lectures is reproduced here.
In discussing the past, I referred to two major traditions
that have enriched the study of language in their separate and very
different ways; and in my last lecture, I tried to give some indication
of the topics that seem on the immediate horizon today, as a kind
of synthesis of philosophical grammar and structural linguistics
begins to take shape. Each of the major traditions of study and
speculation that I have been using as a point of reference was associated
with a certain characteristic approach to the problems of mind;
we might say, without distortion, that each evolved as a specific
branch of the psychology of its time, to which it made a distinctive
contribution.
It may seem a bit paradoxical to speak of structural linguistics in this way,
given its militant anti-psychologism. But the paradox is lessened when we take
note of the fact that this militant anti-psychologism is no less true of much of
contemporary psychology itself, particularly of those branches that until a few
years ago monopolised the study of use and acquisition of language. We live,
after all, in the age of "behavioural science," not of "the science of mind." I
do not want to read too much into a terminological innovation, but I think that
there is some significance in the ease and willingness with which modern
thinking about man and society accepts the designation "behavioural science." No
sane person has ever doubted that behaviour provides much of the evidence for
this study - all of the evidence, if we interpret "behaviour" in a sufficiently
loose sense. But the term "behavioural science" suggests a not-so-subtle shift
of emphasis toward the evidence itself and away from the deeper underlying
principles and abstract mental structures that might be illuminated by the
evidence of behaviour. It is as if natural science were to be designated "the
science of meter readings." What, in fact, would we expect of natural science in
a culture that was satisfied to accept this designation for its activities?
Behavioural science has been much preoccupied with data and organisation of
data, and it has even seen itself as a kind of technology of control of
behaviour. Anti-mentalism in linguistics and in philosophy of language conforms
to this shift of orientation. As I mentioned in my first lecture, I think that
one major indirect contribution of modern structural linguistics results from
its success in making explicit the assumptions of an anti-mentalistic,
thoroughly operational and behaviourist approach to the phenomena of language.
By extending this approach to its natural limits, it laid the groundwork for a
fairly conclusive demonstration of the inadequacy of any such approach to the
problems of mind.
More generally, I think that the long-range significance of the study of
language lies in the fact that in this study it is possible to give a relatively
sharp and clear formulation of some of the central questions of psychology and
to bring a mass of evidence to bear on them. What is more, the study of language
is, for the moment, unique in the combination it affords of richness of data and
susceptibility to sharp formulation of basic issues.
It would, of course, be silly to try to predict the future of research, and
it will be understood that I do not intend the subtitle of this lecture to be
taken very seriously. Nevertheless, it is fair to suppose that the major
contribution of the study of language will lie in the understanding it can
provide as to the character of mental processes and the structures they form and
manipulate. Therefore, instead of speculating on the likely course of research
into the problems that are coming into focus today, I will concentrate here on
some of the issues that arise when we try to develop the study of linguistic
structure as a chapter of human psychology.
It is quite natural to expect that a concern for language will remain central
to the study of human nature, as it has been in the past. Anyone concerned with
the study of human nature and human capacities must somehow come to grips with
the fact that all normal humans acquire language, whereas acquisition of even
its barest rudiments is quite beyond the capacities of an otherwise intelligent
ape a fact that was emphasised, quite correctly, in Cartesian philosophy.' It is
widely thought that the extensive modern studies of animal communication
challenge this classical view; and it is almost universally taken for granted
that there exists a problem of explaining the "evolution" of human language from
systems of animal communication. However, a careful look at recent studies of
animal communication seems to me to provide little support for these
assumptions. Rather, these studies simply bring out even more clearly the extent
to which human language appears to be a unique phenomenon, without significant
analogue in the animal world. If this is so, it is quite senseless to raise the
problem of explaining the evolution of human language from more primitive
systems of communication that appear at lower levels of intellectual capacity.
The issue is important, and I would like to dwell on it for a moment.
The assumption that human language evolved from more primitive systems is
developed in an interesting way by Karl Popper in his recently published Arthur
Compton Lecture, "Clouds and Clocks." He tries to show how problems of freedom
of will and Cartesian dualism can be solved by the analysis of this "evolution."
I am not concerned now with the philosophical conclusions that he draws from
this analysis, but with the basic assumption that there is an evolutionary
development of language from simpler systems of the sort that one discovers in
other organisms. Popper argues that the evolution of language passed through
several stages, in particular a "lower stage" in which vocal gestures are used
for expression of emotional state, for example, and a "higher stage" in which
articulated sound is used for expression of thought - in Popper's terms, for
description and critical argument. His discussion of stages of evolution of
language suggests a kind of continuity, but in fact he establishes no relation
between the lower and higher stages and does not suggest a mechanism whereby
transition can take place from one stage to the next. In short, he gives no
argument to show that the stages belong to a single evolutionary process. In
fact, it is difficult to see what links these stages at all (except for the
metaphorical use of the term "language"). There is no reason to suppose that the
"gaps" are bridgeable. There is no more of a basis for assuming an evolutionary
development of "higher" from "lower" stages, in this case, than there is for
assuming an evolutionary development from breathing to walking; the stages have
no significant analogy, it appears, and seem to involve entirely different
processes and principles.
A more explicit discussion of the relation between human language and animal
communication systems appears in a recent discussion by the comparative
ethologist W. H. Thorpe. He points out that mammals other than man appear to
lack the human ability to imitate sounds, and that one might therefore have
expected birds (many of which have this ability to a remarkable extent) to be
"the group which ought to have been able to evolve language in the true sense,
and not the mammals." Thorpe does not suggest that human language "evolved" in
any strict sense from simpler systems, but he does argue that the characteristic
properties of human language can be found in animal communication systems,
although "we cannot at the moment say definitely that they are all present in
one particular animal." The characteristics shared by human and animal language
are the properties of being "purposive," "syntactic," and "propositional."
Language is purposive "in that there is nearly always in human speech a definite
intention of getting something over to somebody else, altering his behaviour,
his thoughts, or his general attitude toward a situation." Human language is
"Syntactic" in that an utterance is a performance with an internal organisation,
with structure and coherence. It is "propositional" in that it transmits
information. In this sense, then, both human language and animal communication
are purposive, syntactic, and propositional.
All this may be true, but it establishes very little, since when we move to
the level of abstraction at which human language and animal communication fall
together, almost all other behaviour is included as well. Consider walking:
Clearly, walking is purposive behaviour, in the most general sense of
"purposive." Walking is also "syntactic" in the sense just defined, as, in fact,
Karl Lashley pointed out a long time ago in his important discussion of serial
order in behaviour, to which I referred in the first lecture. Furthermore, it
can certainly be informative; for example, I can signal my interest in reaching
a certain goal by the speed or intensity with which I walk.
It is, incidentally, precisely in this manner that the examples of animal
communication that Thorpe presents are "propositional." He cites as an example
the song of the European robin, in which the rate of alternation of high and low
pitch signals the intention of the bird to defend its territory; the higher the
rate of alternation, the greater the intention to defend the territory. The
example is interesting, but it seems to me to show very clearly the hopelessness
of the attempt to relate human language to animal communication. Every animal
communication system that is known (if we disregard some science fiction about
dolphins) uses one of two basic principles: Either it consists of a fixed,
finite number of signals, each associated with a specific range of behaviour or
emotional state, as is illustrated in the extensive primate studies that have
been carried out by Japanese scientists for the past several years; or it makes
use of a fixed, finite number of linguistic dimensions, each of which is
associated with a particular nonlinguistic dimension in such a way that
selection of a point along the linguistic dimension determines and signals a
certain point along the associated nonlinguistic dimension. The latter is the
principle realised in Thorpe's bird-song example. Rate of alternation of high
and low pitch is a linguistic dimension correlated with the nonlinguistic
dimension of intention to defend a territory. The bird signals its intention to
defend a territory by selecting a correlated point along the linguistic
dimension of pitch alternation - I use the word "select" loosely, of course. The
linguistic dimension is abstract, but the principle is clear. A communication
system of the second type has an indefinitely large range of potential signals,
as does human language. The mechanism and principle, however, are entirely
different from those employed by human language to express indefinitely many new
thoughts, intentions, feelings, and so on. It is not correct to speak of a
"deficiency" of the animal system, in terms of range of potential signals;
rather the opposite, since the animal system admits in principle of continuous
variation along the linguistic dimension (insofar as it makes sense to speak of
"continuity" in such a case), whereas human language is discrete. Hence, the
issue is not one of "more" or "less," but rather of an entirely different
principle of organisation. When I make some arbitrary statement in a human
language - say, that "the rise of supranational corporations poses new dangers
for human freedom" - I am not selecting a point along some linguistic dimension
that signals a corresponding point along an associated nonlinguistic dimension,
nor am I selecting a signal from a finite behavioural repertoire, innate or
learned.
Furthermore, it is wrong to think of human use of language as
characteristically informative, in fact or in intention. Human language can be
used to inform or mislead, to clarify one's own thoughts or to display one's
cleverness, or simply for play. If I speak with no concern for modifying your
behaviour or thoughts, I am not using language any less than if I say exactly
the same things with such intention. If we hope to understand human language and
the psychological capacities on which it rests, we must first ask what it is,
not how or for what purposes it is used. When we ask what human language is, we
find no striking similarity to animal communication systems. There is nothing
useful to be said about behaviour or thought at the level of abstraction at
which animal and human communication fall together. The examples of animal
communication that have been examined to date do share many of the properties of
human gestural systems, and it might be reasonable to explore the possibility of
direct connection in this case. But human language, it appears, is based on
entirely different principles. This, I think, is an important point, often
overlooked by those who approach human language as a natural, biological
phenomenon; in particular, it seems rather pointless, for these reasons, to
speculate about the evolution of human language from simpler systems - perhaps
as absurd as it would be to speculate about the "evolution" of atoms from clouds
of elementary particles.
As far as we know, possession of human language is associated with a specific
type of mental organisation, not simply a higher degree of intelligence. There
seems to be no substance to the view that human language is simply a more
complex instance of something to be found elsewhere in the animal world. This
poses a problem for the biologist, since, if true, it is an example of true
"emergence" - the appearance of a qualitatively different phenomenon at a
specific stage of complexity of organisation. Recognition of this fact, though
formulated in entirely different terms, is what motivated much of the classical
study of language by those whose primary concern was the nature of mind. And it
seems to me that today there is no better or more promising way to explore the
essential and distinctive properties of human intelligence than through the
detailed investigation of the structure of this unique human possession. A
reasonable guess, then, is that if empirically adequate generative grammars can
be constructed and the universal principles that govern their structure and
organisation determined, then this will be an important contribution to human
psychology, in ways to which I will turn directly, in detail.
In the course of these lectures I have mentioned some of the classical ideas
regarding language structure and contemporary efforts to deepen and extend them.
It seems clear that we must regard linguistic competence - knowledge of a
language - as an abstract system underlying behaviour, a system constituted by
rules that interact to determine the form and intrinsic meaning of a potentially
infinite number of sentences. Such a system - a generative grammar - provides an
explication of the Humboldtian idea of "form of language," which in an obscure
but suggestive remark in his great posthumous work, Über die
Verschiedenheit des Menschlichen Sprachbaues, Humboldt defines as
"that constant and unvarying system of processes underlying the mental act of
raising articulated structurally organised signals to an expression of thought."
Such a grammar defines a language in the Humboldtian sense, namely as "a
recursively generated system, where the laws of generation are fixed and
invariant, but the scope and the specific manner in which they are applied
remain entirely unspecified."
In each such grammar there are particular, idiosyncratic elements, selection
of which ' determines one specific human language; and there are general
universal elements, conditions on the form and organisation of any human
language, that form the subject matter for the study of "universal grammar."
Among the principles of universal grammar are those I discussed in the preceding
lecture - for example, the principles that distinguish deep and surface
structure and that constrain the class of transformational operations that
relate them. Notice, incidentally, that the existence of definite principles of
universal grammar makes possible the rise of the new field of mathematical
linguistics, a field that submits to abstract study the class of generative
systems meeting the conditions set forth in universal grammar. This inquiry aims
to elaborate the formal properties of any possible human language. The field is
in its infancy; it is only in the last decade that the possibility of such an
enterprise has been envisioned. It has some promising initial results, and it
suggests one possible direction for future research that might prove to be of
great importance. Thus, mathematical linguistics seems for the moment to be in a
uniquely favourable position, among mathematical approaches in the social and
psychological sciences, to develop not simply as a theory of data, but as the
study of highly abstract principles and structures that determine the character
of human mental processes. In this case, the mental processes in question are
those involved in the organisation of one specific domain of human knowledge,
namely knowledge of language.
The theory of generative grammar, both particular and universal, points to a
conceptual lacuna in psychological theory that I believe is worth mentioning.
Psychology conceived as "behavioural science" has been concerned with behaviour
and acquisition or control of behaviour. It has no concept corresponding to
"competence," in the sense in which competence is characterised by a generative
grammar. The theory of learning has limited itself to a narrow and surely
inadequate concept of what is learned - namely a system of stimulus-response
connections, a network of associations, a repertoire of behavioural items, a
habit hierarchy, or a system of dispositions to respond in a particular way
under specifiable stimulus conditions.' Insofar as behavioural psychology has
been applied to education or therapy, it has correspondingly limited itself to
this concept of "what is learned." But a generative grammar cannot be
characterised in these terms. What is necessary, in addition to the concept of
behaviour and learning, is a concept of what is learned - a notion of competence
- that lies beyond the conceptual limits of behaviourist psychological theory.
Like much of modern linguistics and modern philosophy of language, behaviourist
psychology has quite consciously accepted methodological restrictions that do
not permit the study of systems of the necessary complexity and abstractness.'
One important future contribution of the study of language to general psychology
may be to focus attention on this conceptual gap and to demonstrate how it may
be filled by the elaboration of a system of underlying competence in one domain
of human intelligence.
There is an obvious sense in which any aspect of psychology is based
ultimately on the observation of behaviour. But it is not at all obvious that
the study of learning should proceed directly to the investigation of factors
that control behaviour or of conditions under which a "behavioural repertoire"
is established. It is first necessary to determine the significant
characteristics of this behavioural repertoire, the principles on which it is
organised. A meaningful study of learning can proceed only after this
preliminary task has been carried out and has led to a reasonably well-confirmed
theory of underlying competence - in the case of language, to the formulation of
the generative grammar that underlies the observed use of language. Such a study
will concern itself with the relation between the data available to the organism
and the competence that it acquires; only to the extent that the abstraction to
competence has been successful - in the case of language, to the extent that the
postulated grammar is "descriptively adequate" in the sense described in Lecture
2 - can the investigation of learning hope to achieve meaningful results. If, in
some domain, the organisation of the behavioural repertoire is quite trivial and
elementary, then there will be little harm in avoiding the intermediate stage of
theory construction, in which we attempt to characterise accurately the
competence that is acquired. But one cannot count on this being the case, and in
the study of language it surely is not the case. With a richer and more adequate
characterisation of "what is learned" - of the underlying competence that
constitutes the "final state" of the organism being studied - it may be possible
to approach the task of constructing a theory of learning that will be much less
restricted in scope than modern behavioural psychology has proved to be. Surely
it is pointless to accept methodological strictures that preclude such an
approach to problems of learning.
Are there other areas of human competence where one might hope to develop a
fruitful theory, analogous to generative grammar? Although this is a very
important question, there is very little that can be said about it today. One
might, for example, consider the problem of how a person comes to acquire a
certain concept of three-dimensional space, or an implicit "theory of human
action," in similar terms. Such a study would begin with the attempt to
characterise the implicit theory that underlies actual performance and would
then turn to the question of how this theory develops under the given conditions
of time and access to data that is, in what way the resulting system of beliefs
is determined by the interplay of available data, "heuristic procedures," and
the innate schematism that restricts and conditions the form of the acquired
system. At the moment, this is nothing more than a sketch of a program of
research.
There have been some attempts to study the structure of other, language-like
systems - the study of kinship systems and folk taxonomies comes to mind, for
example. But so far, at least, nothing has been discovered that is even roughly
comparable to language in these domains. No one, to my knowledge, has devoted
more thought to this problem than Lévi-Strauss. For example, his recent book on
the categories of primitive mentality is a serious and thoughtful attempt to
come to grips with this problem. Nevertheless, I do not see what conclusions can
be reached from a study of his materials beyond the fact that the savage mind
attempts to impose some organisation on the physical world - that humans
classify, if they perform any mental acts at all. Specifically, Lévi-Strauss's
well-known critique of totemism seems to reduce to little more than this
conclusion.
Lévi-Strauss models his investigations quite consciously on structural
linguistics, particularly on the work of Troubetzkoy and Jakobson. He repeatedly
and quite correctly emphasises that one cannot simply apply procedures analogous
to those of phonemic analysis to subsystems of society and culture. Rather, he
is concerned with structures "where they may be found ... in the kinship system,
political ideology, mythology, ritual, art," and so on, and he wishes to examine
the formal properties of these structures in their own terms. But several
reservations are necessary when structural linguistics is used as a model
in this way. For one thing, the structure of a phonological system is of very
little interest as a formal object; there is nothing of significance to be said,
from a formal point of view, about a set of forty-odd elements cross-classified
in terms of eight or ten features. The significance of structuralist phonology,
as developed by Troubetzkoy, Jakobson, and others, lies not in the formal
properties of phonemic systems but in the fact that a fairly small number of
features that can be specified in absolute, language - independent terms appear
to provide the basis for the organisation of all phonological systems. The
achievement of structuralist phonology was to show that the phonological rules
of a great variety of languages apply to classes of elements that can be simply
characterised in terms of these features; that historical change affects such
classes in a uniform way; and that the organisation of features plays a basic
role in the use and acquisition of language. This was a discovery of the
greatest importance, and it provides the groundwork for much of contemporary
linguistics. But if we abstract away from the specific universal set of features
and the rule systems in which they function, little of any significance
remains.
Furthermore, to a greater and greater extent, current work in phonology is
demonstrating that the real richness of phonological systems lies not in the
structural patterns of phonemes but rather in the intricate systems of rules by
which these patterns are formed, modified, and elaborated.' The structural
patterns that arise at various stages of derivation are a kind of epiphenomenon.
The system of phonological rules makes use of the universal features in a
fundamental way, but it is the properties of the systems of rules, it seems to
me, that really shed light on the specific nature of the organisation of
language. For example, there appear to be very general conditions, such as the
principle of cyclic ordering (discussed in the preceding lecture) and others
that are still more abstract, that govern the application of these rules, and
there are many interesting and unsolved questions as to how the choice of rules
is determined by intrinsic, universal relations among features. Furthermore, the
idea of a mathematical investigation of language structures, to which
Lévi-Strauss occasionally alludes, becomes meaningful only when one considers
systems of rules with infinite generative capacity. There is nothing to be said
about the abstract structure of the various patterns that appear at various
stages of derivation. If this is correct, then one cannot expect structuralist
phonology, in itself, to provide a useful model for investigation of other
cultural and social systems.
In general, the problem of extending concepts of linguistic structure to
other cognitive systems seems to me, for the moment, in not too promising a
state, although it is no doubt too early for pessimism.
Before turning to the general implications of the study of linguistic
competence and, more specifically, to the conclusions of universal grammar, it
is well to make sure of the status of these conclusions in the light of current
knowledge of the possible diversity of language. In my first lecture, I quoted
the remarks of William Dwight Whitney about what he referred to as "the infinite
diversity of human speech," the boundless variety that, he maintained,
undermines the claims of philosophical grammar to psychological relevance.
Philosophical grammarians had typically maintained that languages vary little
in their deep structures, though there may be wide variability in surface
manifestations. Thus there is, in this view, an underlying structure of
grammatical relations and categories, and certain aspects of human thought and
mentality are essentially invariant across languages, although languages may
differ as to whether they express the grammatical relations formally by
inflection or word order, for example. Furthermore, an investigation of their
work indicates that the underlying recursive principles that generate deep
structure were assumed to be restricted in certain ways - for example, by the
condition that new structures are formed only by the insertion of new
"propositional content," new structures that themselves correspond to actual
simple sentences, in fixed positions in already formed structures. Similarly,
the grammatical transformations that form surface structures through reordering,
ellipsis, and other formal operations must themselves meet certain fixed general
conditions, such as those discussed in the preceding lecture. In short, the
theories of philosophical grammar, and the more recent elaborations of these
theories, make the assumption that languages will differ very little, despite
considerable diversity in superficial realisation, when we discover their deeper
structures and unearth their fundamental mechanisms and principles.
It is interesting to observe that this assumption persisted even through the
period of German romanticism, which was, of course, much preoccupied with the
diversity of cultures and with the many rich possibilities for human
intellectual development. Thus, Wilhelm von Humboldt, who is now best remembered
for his ideas concerning the variety of languages and the association of diverse
language structures with divergent "world-views," nevertheless held firmly that
underlying any human language we will find a system that is universal, that
simply expresses man's unique intellectual attributes. For this reason, it was
possible for him to maintain the rationalist view that language is not really
learned - certainly not taught - but rather develops "from within," in an
essentially predetermined way, when the appropriate environmental conditions
exist. One cannot really teach a first language, he argued, but can only
"provide the thread along which it will develop of its own accord," by processes
more like maturation than learning. This Platonistic element in Humboldt's
thought is a pervasive one; for Humboldt, it was as natural to propose an
essentially Platonistic theory of "learning" as it was for Rousseau to found his
critique of repressive social institutions on a conception of human freedom that
derives from strictly Cartesian assumptions regarding the limitations of
mechanical explanation. And in general it seems appropriate to construe both the
psychology and the linguistics of the romantic period as in large part a natural
outgrowth of rationalist conceptions."
The issue raised by Whitney against Humboldt and philosophical grammar in
general is of great significance with respect to the implications of linguistics
for general human psychology. Evidently, these implications can be truly
far-reaching only if the rationalist view is essentially correct, in which case
the structure of language can truly serve as a "mirror of mind," in both its
particular and its universal aspects. It is widely believed that modern
anthropology has established the falsity of the assumptions of the rationalist
universal grammarians by demonstrating through empirical study that languages
may, in fact, exhibit the widest diversity. Whitney's claims regarding the
diversity of languages are reiterated throughout the modern period; Martin Joos,
for example, is simply expressing the conventional wisdom when he takes the
basic conclusion of modern anthropological linguistics to be that "languages can
differ without limit as to either extent or direction."
The belief that anthropological linguistics has demolished the assumptions of
universal grammar seems to me to be quite false in two important respects.
First, it misinterprets the views of classical rationalist grammar, which held
that languages are similar only at the deeper level, the level at which
grammatical relations are expressed and at which the processes that provide for
the creative aspect of language use are to be found. Second, this belief
seriously misinterprets the findings of anthropological linguistics, which has,
in fact, restricted itself almost completely to fairly superficial aspects of
language structure.
To say this is not to criticise anthropological linguistics, a field that is
faced with compelling problems of its own - in particular, the problem of
obtaining at least some record of the rapidly vanishing languages of the
primitive world. Nevertheless, it is important to bear in mind this fundamental
limitation on its achievements in considering the light it can shed on the
theses of universal grammar. Anthropological studies (like structural linguistic
studies in general) do not attempt to reveal the underlying core of generative
processes in language - that is, the processes that determine the deeper levels
of structure and that constitute the systematic means for creating ever novel
sentence types. Therefore, they obviously cannot have any real bearing on the
classical assumption that these underlying generative processes vary only
slightly from language to language. In fact, what evidence is now available
suggests that if universal grammar has serious defects, as indeed it does from a
modern point of view, then these defects lie in the failure to recognise the
abstract nature of linguistic structure and to impose sufficiently strong and
restrictive conditions on the form of any human language. And a characteristic
feature of current work in linguistics is its concern for linguistic universals
of a sort that can only be detected through a detailed investigation of
particular languages, universals governing properties of language that are
simply not accessible to investigation within the restricted framework that has
been adopted, often for very good reasons, within anthropological
linguistics.
I think that if we contemplate the classical problem of psychology, that of
accounting for human knowledge, we cannot avoid being struck by the enormous
disparity between knowledge and experience - in the case of language, between
the generative grammar that expresses the linguistic competence of the native
speaker and the meagre and degenerate data on the basis of which he has
constructed this grammar for himself. In principle the theory of learning should
deal with this problem; but in fact it bypasses the problem, because of the
conceptual gap that I mentioned earlier. The problem cannot even be formulated
in any sensible way until we develop the concept of competence, alongside the
concepts of learning and behaviour, and apply this concept in some domain. The
fact is that this concept has so far been extensively developed and applied only
in the study of human language. It is only in this domain that we have at least
the first steps toward an account of competence, namely the fragmentary
generative grammars that have been constructed for particular languages. As the
study of language progresses, we can expect with some confidence that these
grammars will be extended in scope and depth, although it will hardly come as a
surprise if the first proposals are found to be mistaken in fundamental
ways.
Insofar as we have a tentative first approximation to a generative grammar
for some language, we can for the first time formulate in a useful way the
problem of origin of knowledge. In other words, we can ask the question, What
initial structure must be attributed to the mind that enables it to construct
such a grammar from the data of sense? Some of the empirical conditions that
must be met by any such assumption about innate structure are moderately clear.
Thus, it appears to be a species-specific capacity that is essentially
independent of intelligence, and we can make a fairly good estimate of the
amount of data that is necessary for the task to be successfully accomplished.
We know that the grammars that are in fact constructed vary only slightly among
speakers of the same language, despite wide variations not only in intelligence
but also in the conditions under which language is acquired. As participants in
a certain culture, we are naturally aware of the great differences in ability to
use language, in knowledge of vocabulary, and so on that result from differences
in native ability and from differences in conditions of acquisition; we
naturally pay much less attention to the similarities and to common knowledge,
which we take for granted. But if we manage to establish the requisite psychic
distance, if we actually compare the generative grammars that must be postulated
for different speakers of the same language, we find that the similarities that
we take for granted are quite marked and that the divergences are few and
marginal. What is more, it seems that dialects that are superficially quite
remote, even barely intelligible on first contact, share a vast central core of
common rules and processes and differ very slightly in underlying structures,
which seem to remain invariant through long historical eras. Furthermore, we
discover a substantial system of principles that do not vary among languages
that are, as far as we know, entirely unrelated.
The central problems in this domain are empirical ones that are, in principle
at least, quite straightforward, difficult as they may be to solve in a
satisfactory way. We must postulate an innate structure that is rich enough to
account for the disparity between experience and knowledge, one that can account
for the construction of the empirically justified generative grammars within the
given limitations of time and access to data. At the same time, this postulated
innate mental structure must not be so rich and restrictive as to exclude
certain known languages. There is, in other words, an upper bound and a lower
bound on the degree and exact character of the complexity that can be postulated
as innate mental structure. The factual situation is obscure enough to leave
room for much difference of opinion over the true nature of this innate mental
structure that makes acquisition of language possible. However, there seems to
me to be no doubt that this is an empirical issue, one that can be resolved by
proceeding along the lines that I have just roughly outlined.
My own estimate of the situation is that the real problem for tomorrow is
that of discovering an assumption regarding innate structure that is
sufficiently rich, not that of finding one that is simple or elementary enough
to be "plausible." There is, as far as I can see, no reasonable notion of
"plausibility," no a priori insight into what innate structures are permissible,
that can guide the search for a "sufficiently elementary assumption." It would
be mere dogmatism to maintain without argument or evidence that the mind is
simpler in its innate structure than other biological systems, just as it would
be mere dogmatism to insist that the mind's organisation must necessarily follow
certain set principles, determined in advance of investigation and maintained in
defiance of any empirical findings. I think that the study of problems of mind
has been very definitely hampered by a kind of apriorism with which these
problems are generally approached. In particular, the empiricist assumptions
that have dominated the study of acquisition of knowledge for many years seem to
me to have been adopted quite without warrant and to have no special status
among the many possibilities that one might imagine as to how the mind
functions.
In this connection, it is illuminating to follow the debate that has arisen
since the views I have just sketched were advanced a few years ago as a program
of research - I should say, since this position was resurrected, because to a
significant extent it is the traditional rationalist approach, now amplified and
sharpened and made far more explicit in terms of the tentative conclusions that
have been reached in the recent study of linguistic competence. Two outstanding
American philosophers, Nelson Goodman and Hilary Putnam, have made recent
contributions to this discussion - both misconceived, in my opinion, but
instructive in the misconceptions that they reveal.
Goodman's treatment of the question suffers first from an historical
misunderstanding and second from a failure to formulate correctly the exact
nature of the problem of acquisition of knowledge. His historical
misunderstanding has to do with the issue between Locke and whomever Locke
thought he was criticising in his discussion of innate ideas. According to
Goodman, "Locke made ... acutely clear" that the doctrine of innate ideas is
"false or meaningless." In fact, however, Locke's critique had little relevance
to any familiar doctrine of the seventeenth century. The arguments that Locke
gave were considered and dealt with in quite a satisfactory way in the earliest
seventeenth-century discussions of innate ideas, for example those of Lord
Herbert and Descartes, both of whom took for granted that the system of innate
ideas and principles would not function unless appropriate stimulation took
place. For this reason, Locke's arguments, none of which took cognisance of this
condition, are without force; " for some reason, he avoided the issues that had
been discussed in the preceding half-century. Furthermore, as Leibnitz observed,
Locke's willingness to make use of a principle of "reflection" makes it almost
impossible to distinguish his approach from that of the rationalists, except for
his failure to take even those steps suggested by his predecessors toward
specifying the character of this principle.
But, historical issues aside, I think that Goodman misconstrues the
substantive problem as well. He argues that first-language learning poses no
real problem, because prior to first-language learning the child has already
acquired the rudiments of a symbolic system in his ordinary dealings with the
environment. Hence, first-language learning is analogous to second-language
learning in that the fundamental step has already been taken, and details. can
be elaborated within an already existing framework. This argument might have
some force if it were possible to show that the specific properties of grammar -
say, the distinction of deep and surface structure, the specific properties of
grammatical transformations, the principles of rule ordering, and so on - were
present in some form in these already acquired prelinguistic "symbolic systems."
But since there is not the slightest reason to believe that this is so, the
argument collapses. It is based on an equivocation similar to that discussed
earlier in connection with the argument that language evolved from animal
communication. In that case, as we observed, the argument turned on a
metaphorical use of the term "language." In Goodman's case, the argument is
based entirely on a vague use of the term "symbolic system," and it collapses as
soon as we attempt to give this term a precise meaning. If it were possible to
show that these prelinguistic symbolic systems share certain significant
properties with natural language, we could then argue that these properties of
natural language are acquired by analogy. Of course, we would then face the
problem of explaining how the prelinguistic symbolic systems developed these
properties. But since no one has succeeded in showing that the fundamental
properties of natural language - those discussed in Lecture 2, for example -
appear in prelinguistic symbolic systems or any others, the latter problem does
not arise.
According to Goodman, the reason why the problem of second-language learning
is different from that of first-language learning is that "once one language is
available," it "can be used for giving explanation and instruction." He then
goes on to argue that "acquisition of an initial language is acquisition of a
secondary symbolic system" and is quite on a par with normal second-language
acquisition. The primary symbolic systems to which he refers are
"rudimentary-prelinguistic symbolic systems in which gestures and sensory and
perceptual occurrences of all sorts function as signs." But evidently these
prelinguistic symbolic systems cannot be "used for giving explanation and
instruction" in the way a first language can be used in second-language
instruction. Therefore, even on his own grounds, Goodman's argument is
incoherent.
Goodman maintains that "the claim we are discussing cannot be experimentally
tested even when we have an acknowledged example of a 'bad' language" and that
"the claim has not even been formulated to the extent of citation of a single
general property of 'bad' languages." The first of these conclusions is correct,
in his sense of "experimental test," namely a test in which we "take an infant
at birth, isolate it from all the influences of our language-bound culture, and
attempt to inculcate it with one of the 'bad' artificial languages." Obviously
this is not feasible. But there is no reason why we should be dismayed by the
impossibility of carrying out such a test as this. There are many other ways,
for example, those discussed in Lecture 2 and the references cited there - in
which evidence can be obtained concerning the properties of grammars and
conclusions regarding the general properties of such grammars can be put to
empirical test. Any such conclusion immediately specifies, correctly or
incorrectly, certain properties of "bad" languages. Since there are dozens of
papers and books that attempt to formulate such properties, his second claim,
that not "a single general property of 'bad' languages" has been formulated, is
rather surprising. One might try to show that these attempts are misguided or
questionable, but one can hardly maintain seriously that they do not exist. Any
formulation of a principle of universal grammar makes a strong empirical claim,
which can be falsified by finding counter-instances in some human language,
along the lines of the discussion in Lecture 2. In linguistics, as in any other
field, it is only in such indirect ways as this that one can hope to find
evidence bearing on non-trivial hypotheses. Direct experimental tests of the
sort that Goodman mentions are rarely possible, a matter that may be unfortunate
but is nevertheless characteristic of most research.
At one point Goodman remarks, correctly, that even though "for certain
remarkable facts I have no alternative explanation ... that alone does not
dictate acceptance of whatever theory may be offered; for the theory might be
worse than none. Inability to explain a fact does not condemn me to accept an
intrinsically repugnant and incomprehensible theory." But now consider the
theory of innate ideas that Goodman regards as "intrinsically repugnant and
incomprehensible." Notice, first, that the theory is obviously not
"incomprehensible," on his terms. Thus he appears to be willing, in this
article, to accept the view that in some sense the mature mind contains ideas;
it is obviously not "incomprehensible," then, that some of these ideas are
"implanted in the mind as original equipment," to use his phraseology. And if we
turn to the actual doctrine as developed in rationalist philosophy, rather than
Locke's caricature, the theory becomes even more obviously comprehensible. There
is nothing incomprehensible in the view that stimulation provides the occasion
for the mind to apply certain innate interpretive principles, certain concepts
that proceed from "the power of understanding" itself, from the faculty of
thinking rather than from external objects directly. To take an example from
Descartes (Reply to Objections, V):
When first in infancy we see a triangular figure depicted on
paper, this figure cannot show us how a real triangle ought to be conceived in
the way in which geometricians consider it, because the true triangle is
contained in this figure, just as the statue of Mercury is contained in a rough
block of wood. But because we already possess within us the idea of a true
triangle, and it can be more easily conceived by our mind than the more complex
figure of the triangle drawn on paper, we, therefore, when we see the composite
figure, apprehend not it itself, but rather the authentic triangle.
In this sense the idea of a triangle is innate. Surely the notion
is comprehensible; there would be no difficulty, for example, in programming a
computer to react to stimuli along these lines (though this would not satisfy
Descartes, for other reasons). Similarly, there is no difficulty in principle in
programming a computer with a schematism that sharply restricts the form of a
generative grammar, with an evaluation procedure for grammars of the given form,
with a technique for determining whether given data are compatible with a
grammar of the given form, with a fixed substructure of entities (such as
distinctive features), rules, and principles, and so on - in short, with a
universal grammar of the sort that has been proposed in recent years. For
reasons that I have already mentioned, I believe that these proposals can be
properly regarded as a further development of classical rationalist doctrine, as
an elaboration of some of its main ideas regarding language and mind. Of course,
such a theory will be "repugnant" to one who accepts empiricist doctrine and
regards it as immune to question or challenge. It seems to me that this is the
heart of the matter.
Putnam's paper deals more directly with the points at issue, but it seems to
me that his arguments are also inconclusive, because of certain incorrect
assumptions that he makes about the nature of the acquired grammars. Putnam
assumes that on the level of phonetics the only property proposed in universal
grammar is that a language has "a short list of phonemes." This, he argues, is
not a similarity among languages that requires elaborate explanatory hypotheses.
The conclusion is correct; the assumption is quite wrong. In fact, as I have now
pointed out several times, very strong empirical hypotheses have been proposed
regarding the specific choice of universal features, conditions on the form and
organisation of phonological rules, conditions on rule application, and so on.
If these proposals are correct or near correct, then "similarities among
languages" at the level of sound structure are indeed remarkable and cannot be
accounted for simply by assumptions about memory capacity, as Putnam
suggests.
Above the level of sound structure, Putnam assumes that the only significant
properties of language are that they have proper names, that the grammar
contains a phrase structure component, and that there are rules "abbreviating"
sentences generated by the phrase structure component. He argues that the nature
of the phrase structure component is determined by the existence of proper
names; that the existence of a phrase structure component is explained by the
fact that "all the natural measures of complexity c.f. an algorithm - size of
the machine table, length of computations, time, and space required for the
computation - lead to the . . . result"; that phrase structure systems provide
the "algorithms which are 'simplest' for virtually any computing system," hence
also "for naturally evolved 'computing systems' "; and that there is nothing
surprising in the fact that languages contain rules of abbreviation.
Each of the three conclusions involves a false assumption. From the fact that
a phrase structure system contains proper names one can conclude almost nothing
about its other categories. In fact, there is much dispute at the moment about
the general properties of the underlying phrase structure system for natural
languages; the dispute is not in the least resolved by the existence of proper
names.
As to the second point, it is simply untrue that all measures of complexity
and speed of computation lead to phrase structure rules as the "simplest
possible algorithm." The only existing results that are even indirectly relevant
show that context-free phrase structure grammars (a reasonable model for rules
generating deep structures, when we exclude the lexical items and the
distributional conditions they meet) receive an automata-theoretic
interpretation as non-deterministic push-down storage automata, but the latter
is hardly a "natural" notion from the point of view of "simplicity of
algorithms" and so forth. In fact, it can be argued that the somewhat similar
but not formally related concept of real-time deterministic automation is far
more "natural" in terms of time and space conditions on computation.
However, it is pointless to pursue this topic, because what is at stake is
not the "simplicity" of phrase structure grammars but rather of transformational
grammars with a phrase structure component that plays a role in generating deep
structures. And there is absolutely no mathematical concept of "ease of
computation" or "simplicity of algorithm" that even vaguely suggests that such
systems may have some advantage over the kinds of automata that have been
seriously investigated from this point of view - for example, finite state
automata, linear bounded automata, and so on. The basic concept of
"structure-dependent operation" has never even been considered in a strictly
mathematical concept. The source of this confusion is a misconception on
Putnam's part as to the nature of grammatical transformations. They are not
rules that "abbreviate" sentences; rather, they are operations that form surface
structures from underlying deep structures, in such ways as are illustrated in
the preceding lecture and the references there cited." Hence, to show that
transformational grammars are the "simplest possible" one would have to
demonstrate that the "optimal" computing system would take a string of symbols
as input and determine its surface structure, its underlying deep structure, and
the sequence of transformational operations that relates them. Nothing of the
sort has been shown; in fact, the question has never even been raised.
Putnam argues that even if significant uniformities among languages were to
be discovered, there would be a simpler explanation than the hypothesis of an
innate universal grammar, namely their common origin. But this proposal involves
a serious misunderstanding of the problem at issue. The grammar of a language
must be discovered by the child from the data presented to him. As noted
earlier, the empirical problem is to find a hypothesis about initial structure
rich enough to account for the fact that a specific grammar is constructed by
the child, but not so rich as to be falsified by the known diversity of
language.
Questions of common origin are of potential relevance to this empirical issue
in only one respect: If the existing languages are not a "fair sample" of the
"possible languages," we may be led mistakenly to propose too narrow a schema
for universal grammar. However, as I mentioned earlier, the empirical problem
that we face today is that no one has been able to devise an initial hypothesis
rich enough to account for the acquisition by the child of the grammar that we
are, apparently, led to attribute to him when we try to account for his ability
to use the language in the normal way. The assumption of common origin
contributes nothing to explaining how this achievement is possible. In short,
the language is "reinvented" each time it is learned, and the empirical problem
to be faced by the theory of learning is how this invention of grammar can take
place.
Putnam does face this problem and suggests that there might be "general
multipurpose learning strategies" that account for this achievement. It is, of
course, an empirical question whether the properties of the "language faculty"
are specific to language or are merely a particular case of much more general
mental faculties (or learning strategies).
This is a problem that has been discussed earlier in this lecture,
inconclusively and in a slightly different context. Putnam takes for granted
that it is only general "learning strategies" that are innate but suggests no
grounds for this empirical assumption. As I have argued earlier, a non-dogmatic
approach to this problem can be pursued, without reliance on unargued
assumptions of this sort - that is, through the investigation of specific areas
of human competence, such as language, followed by the attempt to devise a
hypothesis that will account for the development of this competence. If we
discover through such investigation that the same "learning strategies" are
sufficient to account for the development of competence in various domains, we
will have reason to believe that Putnam's assumption is correct. If we discover
that the postulated innate structures differ from case to case, the only
rational conclusion would be that a model of mind must involve separate
"faculties," with unique or partially unique properties. I cannot see how anyone
can resolutely insist on one or the other conclusion in the light of the
evidence now available to us. But one thing is quite clear: Putnam has no
justification for his final conclusion, that "invoking 'Innateness' only
postpones the problem of learning; it does not solve it." Invoking an innate
representation of universal grammar does solve the problem of learning, if it is
true that this is the basis for language acquisition, as it well may be. If, on
the other hand, there are general learning strategies that account for the
acquisition of grammatical knowledge, then postulation of an innate universal
grammar will not "postpone" the problem of learning, but will rather offer an
incorrect solution to this problem. The issue is an empirical one of truth or
falsity, not a methodological one of states of investigation.
To summarise, it seems to me that neither Goodman nor Putnam offers a serious
counterargument to the proposals concerning innate mental structure that have
been advanced (tentatively, of course, as befits empirical hypotheses) or
suggests a plausible alternative approach, with empirical content, to the
problem of acquisition of knowledge.
Assuming the rough accuracy of conclusions that seem tenable today, it is
reasonable to suppose that a generative grammar is a system of many hundreds of
rules of several different types, organised in accordance with certain fixed
principles of ordering and applicability and containing a certain fixed
substructure which, along with the general principles of organisation, is common
to all languages. There is no a priori "naturalness" to such a system, any more
than there is to the detailed structure of the visual cortex. No one who has
given any serious thought to the problem of formalising inductive procedures or
"heuristic methods" is likely to set much store by the hope that such a system
as a generative grammar can be constructed by methods of any generality.
To my knowledge, the only substantive proposal to deal with the problem of
acquisition of knowledge of language is the rationalist conception that I have
outlined. To repeat: Suppose that we assign to the mind, as an innate property,
the general theory of language that we have called "universal grammar." This
theory encompasses the principles that I discussed in the preceding lecture and
many others of the same sort, and it specifies a certain subsystem of rules that
provides a skeletal structure for any language and a variety of conditions,
formal and substantive, that any further elaboration of the grammar must meet.
The theory of universal grammar, then, provides a schema to which any particular
grammar must conform. Suppose, furthermore, that we can make this schema
sufficiently restrictive so that very few possible grammars conforming to the
schema will be consistent with the meagre and degenerate data actually available
to the language learner. His task, then, is to search among the possible
grammars and select one that is not definitely rejected by the data available to
him. What faces the language learner, under these assumptions, is not the
impossible task of inventing a highly abstract and intricately structured theory
on the basis of degenerate data, but rather the much more manageable task of
determining whether these data belong to one or another of a fairly restricted
set of potential languages.
The tasks of the psychologist, then, divide into several sub-tasks. The first
is to discover the innate schema that characterises the class of potential
languages - that defines the "essence" of human language. This sub-task falls to
that branch of human psychology known as linguistics; it is the problem of
traditional universal grammar, of contemporary linguistic theory. The second
sub-task is the detailed study of the actual character of the stimulation and
the organism-environment interaction that sets the innate cognitive mechanism
into operation. This is a study now being undertaken by a few psychologists, and
it is particularly active right here in Berkeley. It has already led to
interesting and suggestive conclusions. One might hope that such study will
reveal a succession of maturational stages leading finally to a full generative
grammar.
A third task is that of determining just what it means for a hypothesis about
the generative grammar of a language to be "consistent" with the data of sense.
Notice that it is a great oversimplification to suppose that a child must
discover a generative grammar that accounts for all the linguistic data that has
been presented to him and that "projects" such data to an infinite range of
potential sound-meaning relations. In addition to achieving this, he must also
differentiate the data of sense into those utterances that give direct evidence
as to the character of the underlying grammar and those that must be rejected by
the hypothesis he selects as ill-formed, deviant, fragmentary, and so on.
Clearly, everyone succeeds in carrying out this task of differentiation - we all
know, within tolerable limits of consistency, which sentences are well formed
and literally interpretable, and which must be interpreted as metaphorical,
fragmentary, and deviant along many possible dimensions. I doubt that it has
been fully appreciated to what extent this complicates the problem of accounting
for language acquisition. Formally speaking, the learner must select a
hypothesis regarding the language to which he is exposed that rejects a good
part of the data on which this hypothesis must rest. Again, it is reasonable to
suppose this is possible only if the range of tenable hypotheses is quite
limited - if the innate schema of universal grammar is highly restrictive. The
third sub-task, then, is to study what we might think of as the problem of
"confirmation" - in this context, the problem of what relation must hold between
a potential grammar and a set of data for this grammar to be confirmed as the
actual theory of the language in question.
I have been describing the problem of acquisition of knowledge of language in
terms that are more familiar in an epistemological than a psychological context,
but I think that this is quite appropriate. Formally speaking, acquisition of
"common-sense knowledge" - knowledge of a language, for example - is not unlike
theory construction of the most abstract sort. Speculating about the future
development of the subject, it seems to me not unlikely, for the reasons I have
mentioned, that learning theory will progress by establishing the innately
determined set of possible hypotheses, determining the conditions of interaction
that lead the mind to put forth hypotheses from this set, and fixing the
conditions under which such a hypothesis is confirmed - and, perhaps, under
which much of the data is rejected as irrelevant for one reason or another.
Such a way of describing the situation should not be too surprising to those
familiar with the history of psychology at Berkeley, where, after all, Edward
Tolman has given his name to the psychology building; but I want to stress that
the hypotheses I am discussing are qualitatively different in complexity and
intricacy from anything that was considered in the classical discussions of
learning. As I have now emphasised several times, there seems to be little
useful analogy between the theory of grammar that a person has internalised and
that provides the basis for his normal, creative use of language, and any other
cognitive system that has so far been isolated and described; Similarly, there
is little useful analogy between the schema of universal grammar that we must, I
believe, assign to the mind as an innate character, and any other known system
of mental organisation. It is quite possible that the lack of analogy testifies
to our ignorance of other aspects of mental function, rather than to the
absolute uniqueness of linguistic structure; but the fact is that we have, for
the moment, no objective reason for supposing this to be true.
The way in which I have been describing acquisition of knowledge of language
calls to mind a very interesting and rather neglected lecture given by Charles Sanders Peirce more than fifty years ago, in which he
developed some rather similar notions about acquisition of knowledge in general.
Peirce argued that the general limits of human intelligence are much more narrow
than might be suggested by romantic assumptions about the limitless
perfectibility of man (or, for that matter, than are suggested by his own
"pragmaticist" conceptions of the course of scientific progress in his
better-known philosophical studies). He held that innate limitations on
admissible hypotheses are a precondition for successful theory construction, and
that the "guessing instinct" that provides hypotheses makes use of inductive
procedures only for "corrective action," Peirce maintained in this lecture that
the history of early science shows that something approximating a correct theory
was discovered with remarkable ease and rapidity, on the basis of highly
inadequate data, as soon as certain problems were faced; he noted "how few were
the guesses that men of surpassing genius had to make before they rightly
guessed the laws of nature." And, he asked, "How was it that man was ever led to
entertain that true theory? You cannot say that it happened by chance, because
the chances are too overwhelmingly against the single true theory in the twenty
or thirty thousand years during which man has been a thinking animal, ever
having come into any man's head." A fortiori, the chances are even more
overwhelmingly against the true theory of each language ever having come into
the head of every four-year-old child. Continuing with Peirce: "Man's mind has a
natural adaptation to imagining correct theories of some kinds.... If man had
not the gift of a mind adapted to his requirements, he could not have acquired
any knowledge." Correspondingly, in our present case, it seems that knowledge of
a languages grammar - can be acquired only by an organism that is "preset" with
a severe restriction on the form of grammar. This innate restriction is a
precondition, in the Kantian sense, for linguistic experience, and it appears to
be the critical factor in determining the course and result of language
learning. The child cannot know at birth which language he is to learn, but he
must know that its grammar must be of a predetermined form that excludes many
imaginable languages. Having selected a permissible hypothesis, he can use
inductive evidence for corrective action, confirming or disconfirming his
choice. Once the hypothesis is sufficiently well confirmed, the child knows the
language defined by this hypothesis; consequently, his knowledge extends
enormously beyond his experience and, in fact, leads him to characterise much of
the data of experience as defective and deviant.
Peirce regarded inductive processes as rather marginal to the acquisition of
knowledge; in his words, "Induction has no originality in it, but only tests a
suggestion already made." To understand how knowledge is acquired, in the
rationalist view that Peirce outlined, we must penetrate the mysteries of what
he called "abduction," and we must discover that which "gives a rule to
abduction and so puts a limit upon admissible hypotheses." Peirce maintained
that the search for principles of abduction leads us to the study of innate
ideas, which provide the instinctive structure of human intelligence. But Peirce
was no dualist in the Cartesian sense; he argued (not very persuasively, in my
opinion) that there is a significant analogy between human intelligence, with
its abductive restrictions, and animal instinct. Thus, he maintained that man
discovered certain true theories only because his "instincts must have involved
from the beginning certain tendencies to think truly" about certain specific
matters; similarly, "You cannot seriously think that every little chicken that
is hatched, has to rummage through all possible theories until it lights upon
the good idea of picking up something and eating it. On the contrary, you think
that the chicken has an innate idea of doing this; that is to say, that it can
think of this, but has no faculty of thinking anything else.... But if you are
going to think every poor chicken endowed with an innate tendency towards a
positive truth, why should you think to man alone this gift is denied?"
No one took up Peirce's challenge to develop a theory of abduction, to
determine those principles that limit the admissible hypotheses or present them
in a certain order. Even today, this remains a task for the future. It is a task
that need not be undertaken if empiricist psychological doctrine can be
substantiated; therefore, it is of great importance to subject this doctrine to
rational analysis, as has been done, in part, in the study of language. I would
like to repeat that it was the great merit of structural linguistics, as of
Hullian learning theory in its early stages and of several other modern
developments, to have given precise form to certain empiricist assumptions."
Where this step has been taken, the inadequacy of the postulated mechanisms has
been clearly demonstrated, and, in the case of language at least, we can even
begin to see just why any methods of this sort must fail - for example, because
they cannot, in principle, provide for the properties of deep structures and the
abstract operations of formal grammar. Speculating about the future, I think it
is not unlikely that the dogmatic character of the general empiricist framework
and its inadequacy to human and animal intelligence will gradually become more
evident as specific realisations, such as taxonomic linguistics, behaviourist
learning theory, and the perception models," heuristic methods, and "general
problem solvers" of the early enthusiasts of "artificial intelligence," are
successively rejected on empirical grounds when they are made precise and on
grounds of vacuity when they are left vague. And - assuming this projection to
be accurate - it will then be possible to undertake a general study of the
limits and capacities of human intelligence, to develop a Peircean logic of
abduction.
Modern psychology is not devoid of such initiatives. The contemporary study
of generative grammar and its universal substructure and governing principles is
one such manifestation. Closely related is the study of the biological bases of
human language, an investigation to which Eric Lenneberg has made substantial
contributions." It is tempting to see a parallel development in the very
important work of Piaget and others interested in "genetic epistemology," but I
am not sure that this is accurate. It is not clear to me, for example, what
Piaget takes to be the basis for the transition from one of the stages that he
discusses to the next, higher stage. There is, furthermore, a possibility,
suggested by recent work of Mehler and Bever," that the deservedly well-known
results on conservation, in particular, may not demonstrate successive stages of
intellectual development in the sense discussed by Piaget and his coworkers, but
something rather different. If the preliminary results of Mehler and Bever are
correct, then it would follow that the "final stage," in which conservation is
properly understood, was already realised at a very early period of development.
Later, the child develops a heuristic technique that is largely adequate but
that fails under the conditions of the conservation experiment. Still later, he
adjusts this technique successfully and once again makes the correct judgments
in the conservation experiment. If this analysis is correct, then what we are
observing is not a succession of stages of intellectual development, in Piaget's
sense, but rather slow progress in bringing heuristic techniques into line with
general concepts that have always been present. These are interesting
alternatives; either way, the results may bear in important ways on the topics
we are considering.
Still more clearly to the point, I think, are the developments in comparative
ethology over the past thirty years, and certain current work in experimental
and physiological psychology. One can cite many examples: for example, in the
latter category, the work of Bower, suggesting an innate basis for the
perceptual constancies; studies in the Wisconsin primate laboratory on complex
innate releasing mechanisms in rhesus monkeys; the work of Hubel, Barlow, and
others on highly specific analysing mechanisms in the lower cortical centers of
mammals; and a number of comparable studies of lower organisms (for example, the
beautiful work of Lettvin and his associates on frog vision). There is now good
evidence from such investigations that perception of line, angle, motion, and
other complex properties of the physical world is based on innate organisation
of the neural system.
In some cases at least, these built-in structures will degenerate unless
appropriate stimulation takes place at an early stage in life, but although such
experience is necessary to permit the innate mechanisms to function, there is no
reason to believe that it has more than a marginal effect on determining how
they function to organise experience. Furthermore, there is nothing to suggest
that what has so far been discovered is anywhere near the limit of complexity of
innate structures. The basic techniques for exploring the neural mechanisms are
only a few years old, and it is impossible to predict what order of specificity
and complexity will be demonstrated when they come to be extensively applied.
For the present, it seems that most complex organisms have highly specific forms
of sensory and perceptual organisation that are associated with the
Umwelt and the manner of life of the organism. There is little reason to
doubt that what is true of lower organisms is true of humans as well.
Particularly in the case of language, it is natural to expect a close relation
between innate properties of the mind and features of linguistic structure; for
language, after all, has no existence apart from its mental representation.
Whatever properties it has must be those that are given to it by the innate
mental processes of the organism that has invented it and that invents it anew
with each succeeding generation, along with whatever properties are associated
with the conditions of its use. Once again, it seems that language should be,
for this reason, a most illuminating probe with which to explore the
organisation of mental processes.
Turning to comparative ethology, it is interesting to note that one of its
earliest motivations was the hope that through the "investigation of the a
priori, of the innate working hypotheses present in subhuman organisms," it
would be possible to shed light on the a priori forms of human thought. This
formulation of intent is quoted from an early and little-known paper by Konrad
Lorenz." Lorenz goes on to express views very much like those Peirce had
expressed a generation earlier. He maintains:
One familiar with the innate modes of reaction of subhuman
organisms can readily hypothesise that the a priori is due to hereditary
differentiations of the central nervous system which have become characteristic
of the species, producing hereditary dispositions to think in certain forms....
Most certainly Hume was wrong when he wanted to derive all that is a priori from
that which the senses supply to experience, just as wrong as Wundt or Helmholtz
who simply explain it as an abstraction from preceding experience. Adaptation of
the a priori to the real world has no more originated from "experience" than
adaptation of the fin of the fish to the properties of water. just as the form
of the fin is given a priori, prior to any individual negotiation of the young
fish with the water, and just as it is this form that makes possible this
negotiation, so it is also the case with our forms of perception and categories
in their relationship to our negotiation with the real external world through
experience. In the case of animals, we find limitations specific to the forms of
experience possible for them. We believe we can demonstrate the closest
functional and probably genetic relationship between these animal a priori's and
our human a priori. Contrary to Hume, we believe, just as did Kant, that a
"pure" science of innate forms of human thought, independent of all experience,
is possible.
Peirce, to my knowledge, is original and unique in stressing the
problem of studying the rules that limit the class of possible theories. Of
course, his concept of abduction, like Lorenz's biological a priori, has a
strongly Kantian flavour, and all derive from the rationalist psychology that
concerned itself with the forms, the limits, and the principles that provide
"the sinews and connections" for human thought, that underlie "that infinite
amount of knowledge of which we are not always conscious," of which Leibnitz
spoke. It is therefore quite natural that we should link these developments to
the revival of philosophical grammar, which grew from the same soil as an
attempt, quite fruitful and legitimate, to explore one basic facet of human
intelligence.
In recent discussion, models and observations derived from ethology have
frequently been cited as providing biological support, or at least analogue, to
new approaches to the study of human intelligence. I cite these comments of
Lorenz's mainly in order to show that this reference does not distort the
outlook of at least some of the founders of this domain of comparative
psychology.
One word of caution is necessary in referring to Lorenz, now that he has been
discovered by Robert Ardrey and Joseph Alsop and popularised as a prophet of
doom. It seems to me that Lorenz's views on human aggression have been extended
to near absurdity by some of his expositors. It is no doubt true that there are
innate tendencies in the human psychic constitution that lead to aggressiveness
under specific social and cultural conditions. But there is little reason to
suppose that these tendencies are so dominant as to leave us forever tottering
on the brink of a Hobbesian war of all against all - as, incidentally, Lorenz at
least is fully aware, if I read him rightly. Scepticism is certainly in order
when a doctrine of man's "inherent aggressiveness" comes to the surface in a
society that glorifies competitiveness, in a civilisation that has been
distinguished by the brutality of the attack that it has mounted against less
fortunate peoples. It is fair to ask to what extent the enthusiasm for this
curious view of man's nature is attributable to fact and logic and to what
extent it merely reflects the limited extent to which the general cultural level
has advanced since the days when Clive and the Portuguese explorers taught the
meaning of true savagery to the inferior races that stood in their way.
In any event, I would not want what I am saying to be confused with other,
entirely different attempts to revive a theory of human instinct. What seems to
me important in ethology is its attempt to explore the innate properties that
determine how knowledge is acquired and the character of this knowledge.
Returning to this theme, we must consider a further question: How did the human
mind come to acquire the innate structure that we are led to attribute to it?
Not too surprisingly, Lorenz takes the position that this is simply a matter of
natural selection. Peirce offers a rather different speculation, arguing that
"nature fecundates the mind of man with ideas which, when these ideas grow up,
will resemble their father, Nature." Man is "provided with certain natural
beliefs that are true" because "certain uniformities ... prevail throughout the
universe, and the reasoning mind is [it]self a product of this universe. These
same laws are thus, by logical necessity, incorporated in his own being." Here,
it seems clear that Peirce's argument is entirely without force and that it
offers little improvement over the pre-established harmony that it was
presumably intended to replace. The fact that the mind is a product of natural
laws does not imply that it is equipped to understand these laws or to arrive at
them by "abduction." There would be no difficulty in designing a device (say,
programming a computer) that is a product of natural law, but that, given data,
will arrive at any arbitrary absurd theory to "explain" these data.
In fact, the processes by which the human mind achieved its present stage of
complexity and its particular form of innate organisation are a total mystery,
as much so as the analogous questions about the physical or mental organisation
of any other complex organism. It is perfectly safe to attribute this
development to "natural selection," so long as we realise that there is no
substance to this assertion, that it amounts to nothing more than a belief that
there is some naturalistic explanation for these phenomena. The problem of
accounting for evolutionary development is, in some ways, rather like that of
explaining successful abduction. The laws that determine possible successful
mutation and the nature of complex organisms are as unknown as the laws that
determine the choice of hypotheses." With no knowledge of the laws that
determine the organisation and structure of complex biological systems, it is
just as senseless to ask what the "probability" is for the human mind to have
reached its present state as it is to inquire into the "probability" that a
particular physical theory will be devised. And, as we have noted, it is idle to
speculate about laws of learning until we have some indication of what kind of
knowledge is attainable - in the case of language, some indication of the
constraints on the set of potential grammars.
In studying the evolution of mind, we cannot guess to what extent there are
physically possible alternatives to, say, transformational generative grammar,
for an organism meeting certain other physical conditions characteristic of
humans. Conceivably, there are none - or very few in which case talk about
evolution of the language capacity is beside the point. The vacuity of such
speculation, however, has no bearing one way or another on those aspects of the
problem of mind that can be sensibly pursued. It seems to me that these aspects
are, for the moment, the problems illustrated in the case of language by the
study of the nature, the use, and the acquisition of linguistic competence.
There is one final issue that deserves a word of comment. I have been using
mentalistic terminology quite freely, but entirely without prejudice as to the
question of what may be the physical realisation of the abstract mechanisms
postulated to account for the phenomena of behaviour or the acquisition of
knowledge. We are not constrained, as was Descartes, to postulate a second
substance when we deal with phenomena that are not expressible in terms of
matter in motion, in his sense. Nor is there much point in pursuing the question
of psychophysical parallelism, in this connection. It is an interesting question
whether the functioning and evolution of human mentality can 'be accommodated
within the framework of physical explanation, as presently conceived, or whether
there are new principles, now unknown, that must be invoked, perhaps principles
that emerge only at higher levels of organisation than can now be submitted to
physical investigation. We can, however, be fairly sure that there will be a
physical explanation for the phenomena in question, if they can be explained at
all, for an uninteresting terminological reason, namely that the concept of
"physical explanation" will no doubt be extended to incorporate whatever is
discovered in this domain, exactly as it was extended to accommodate
gravitational and electromagnetic force, massless particles, and numerous other
entities and processes that would have offended the common sense of earlier
generations. But it seems clear that this issue need not delay the study of the
topics that are now open to investigation, and it seems futile to speculate
about matters so remote from present understanding.
I have tried to suggest that the study of language may very well, as was
traditionally supposed, provide a remarkably favourable perspective for the
study of human mental processes. The creative aspect of language use, when
investigated with care and respect for the facts, shows that current notions of
habit and generalisation, as determinants of behaviour or knowledge, are quite
inadequate. The abstractness of linguistic structure reinforces this conclusion,
and it suggests further that in both perception and learning the mind plays an
active role in determining the character of the acquired knowledge. The
empirical study of linguistic universals has led to the formulation of highly
restrictive and, I believe, quite plausible hypotheses concerning the possible
variety of human languages, hypotheses that contribute to the attempt to develop
a theory of acquisition of knowledge that gives due place to intrinsic mental
activity. It seems to me, then, that the study of language should occupy a
central place in general psychology.
Surely the classical questions of language and mind receive no final
solution, or even the hint of a final solution, from the work that is being
actively pursued today. Nevertheless, these problems can be formulated in new
ways and seen in a new light. For the first time in many years, it seems to me,
there is some real opportunity for substantial progress in the study of the
contribution of the mind to perception and the innate basis for acquisition of
knowledge. Still, in many respects, we have not made the first approach to a
real answer to the classical problems. For example, the central problems
relating to the creative aspect of language use remain as inaccessible as they
have always been. And the study of universal semantics, surely crucial to the
full investigation of language structure, has barely advanced since the medieval
period. Many other critical areas might be mentioned where progress has been
slow or nonexistent. Real progress has been made in the study of the mechanisms
of language, the formal principles that make possible the creative aspect of
language use and that determine the phonetic form and semantic content of
utterances. Our understanding of these mechanisms, though only fragmentary, does
seem to me to have real implications for the study of human psychology. By
pursuing the kinds of research that now seem feasible and by focusing attention
on certain problems that are now accessible to study, we may be able to spell
out in some detail the elaborate and abstract computations that determine, in
part, the nature of percepts and the character of the knowledge that we can
acquire the highly specific ways of interpreting phenomena that are, in large
measure, beyond our consciousness and control and that may be unique to man. |