Foreword.
Part I: Introduction:.
1. Progress or Degeneration?.
2. The Records, our Witnesses.
3. Lack of Change and Historical Explanation.
4. Our Odyssey.
Part II: The Nineteenth: Century of History:.
5. Historical Relationships.
6. Sound Change.
7. Historical Explanations.
8. Determinist Views of History.
Part III: Grammars and Language Acquisition:.
9. We Know More than we Learn.
10. The Nature of Grammars.
11. The Acquisition Problem: The Poverty of the Stimulus.
12. The Analytical Triplet.
13. Real-Time Acquisition of Grammars.
Part IV: Gradualism and Catastrophes:.
14. Grammars and Change.
15. Social Grammars.
16. Gradualism, Imagined and Real.
17. Catastrophes.
18. Competing Grammars.
19. The Spread of New Grammars.
20. Parametric Change.
Part V: The Loss of Case and its Syntactic Effects:.
21. Case.
22. Middle English Split Genitives.
23. Inherent Case and Thematic Roles in Early English.
24. The Loss and Origin of Case Systems.
Part VI: Cue-Based Acquisition and Change in Grammars:.
25. Models of Learnability.
26. Cue-Based Acquisition and Loss of Verb-Second.
27. V-to-I Raising and its Cue.
28. Creolization and Signed Languages.
Part VII: Equilibrium and Small Punctuations:.
29. Equilibrium.
30. English Auxiliary Verbs in the Eighteenth Century.
31. French chez.
Part VIII: Historicism: The Use and Abuse of Clio:.
32. Principles of History.
33. Clio Working through Biology.
34. Diachronic Reanalyses.
35. Trajectories.
Part IX: The Evolution of the Language Faculty:.
36. Bumpiness.
37. Explaining Evolution.
38. A UG Condition on Movement Traces.
39. The Condition is Maladaptive.
40. Conclusion.
Part X: A Science of History:.
41. Classical and Chaotic Views of Science.
43. History as an Epiphenomenon.
References.
Index.
David Lightfoot is Professor of Linguistics at the University of Maryland, College Park where he is also Associate Director of the program in Neural and Cognitive Science. His books include The Language Lottery and How to Set Parameters.
"My favourite parts were those that gave detailed explanations for
learning in the context of a changing language input: how children
solve the problem of an emergent syntactic property, one that
doesn't appear to cohere with the rest of the system, with the
result that the grammar is reorganized in the next generation."
Lila Gleitman
"David Lightfoot is addressing the core questions of the study of
language: what it is, how it comes to be that way, how the child
acquires it. His account is richly textured, integrating many
different approaches with lucidity and insight. His analyses and
conclusions are challenging and provocative, both for specialists
in the particular areas he brings together, and for those seeking a
clear picture of current understanding and open problems." Noam
Chomsky
'There can be little question that it will represent a major work,
required reading for anyone with interests in this area.' Mark
Hale, Concordia University
"This book challenges conventional understanding of language
learning by showing that language change is essentially
contingent-unpredictable but explainable. The role of natural
selection in facilitating the understanding of the evolution of the
language faculty in the human species is contested."
Psycholinguistics
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