UniSX 1.
UniSX 1.
UniSX 1.
2 – Jaime Vera
PUCP, 28/08/2019
There is no more reason for languages to change than there is for automobiles to add fins one year and remove them the next, for
jackets to have three buttons one year and two the next, etc. (Postal 1968)
[Grammar is] a continual movement toward structure, a postponement or ‘deferral’ of structure, a view of structure as always
provisional, always negotiable, and in fact epiphenomenal. (Hopper 1982)” (Newmeyer 2010: 301)
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that innate linguistic knowledge will simultaneously serve as a theory about what languages are like and as a theory about why they are that
way.
Curiously, however, many linguists who reject Chomsky’s views about innateness seem to implicitly accept the Chomskyan view
that a single theory will serve both theoretical goals. Many functionalists, in particular, propose kinds of explanations for why languages
are the way they are that are radically different from those of Chomsky, yet they often see questions of how to describe languages as the
domain of formal linguists, confusing issues of descriptive theory with issues of explanatory theory. […] I argue that what Dixon (1997)
calls “basic linguistic theory” will serve as such a descriptive theory.” (pp. 207-8)
«Linguists often distinguish work they characterize as descriptive from work they characterize as theoretical. Similarly, linguists
often characterize certain work as atheoretical. This label is sometimes applied, not only to descriptive work on particular languages, but
also occasionally to crosslinguistic typological work. […] The idea that description can be atheoretical is simply confused. The
analytical assumptions and the concepts one assumes necessarily constitute a set of theoretical assumptions. If all work in the
field shared the same set of assumptions, the notion of theory might be unnecessary, but it would still be the case that all such work would
be assuming the same theoretical framework. And when one sees the contrast between recent descriptive work and work in early generative
grammar, recent Chomskyan generative grammar, tagmemics, and American Structuralism, among others, it is clear that what distinguishes
the recent descriptive work from these other approaches is a very different set of theoretical assumptions. […] Because of the false contrast
many linguists see between description and theory, and because of the higher prestige associated with what is called theory, work in
basic linguistic theory is often dismissed as “merely” descriptive.» (pp. 207, 212, 229)
«[…] the tendencies should not be taken as sharply honed, well-developed research programs or theories. Rather, they provide background
biases for the development of specific research programs—biases which sometimes develop into ideological stances or polemical programs
or lead to the branching off of new specialisms with separate journals. In the judgment of Phillips (2010), “Dialog between adherents of
different approaches is alarmingly rare.” […] Many of the central differences between these approaches depend on what proponents
consider to be the main project of linguistic theorizing, and what they count as a satisfying explanation.
Many researchers—perhaps most—mix elements from each of the three approaches. […] Certainly, there are no logical impediments
for a researcher with one tendency from simultaneously pursuing another; these approaches are only general centers of emphasis.» (§ 1)