Learnability and Cognition New Edition
English

About The Book

<b>A classic book about language acquisition and conceptual structure with a new preface by the author The Secret Life of Verbs.</b><p>Before Steven Pinker wrote bestsellers on language and human nature he wrote several technical monographs on language acquisition that have become classics in cognitive science. <i>Learnability and Cognition</i> first published in 1989 brought together two big topics: how do children learn their mother tongue and how does the mind represent basic categories of meaning such as space time causality agency and goals? The stage for this synthesis was set by the fact that when children learn a language they come to make surprisingly subtle distinctions: <i>pour water into the glass</i> and <i>fill the glass with water</i> sound natural but <i>pour the glass with water</i> and <i>fill water into the glass</i> sound odd. How can this happen given that children are not reliably corrected for uttering odd sentences and they don't just parrot back the correct ones they hear from their parents? Pinker resolves this paradox with a theory of how children acquire the meaning and uses of verbs and explores that theory's implications for language thought and the relationship between them.</p><p>As Pinker writes in a new preface The Secret Life of Verbs the phenomena and ideas he explored in this book inspired his 2007 bestseller <i>The Stuff of Thought: Language as a Window into Human Nature</i>. These technical discussions he notes provide insight not just into language acquisition but into literary metaphor scientific understanding political discourse and even the conceptions of sexuality that go into obscenity.</p>
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