DocumentCode
3350107
Title
Language, logic, and the brain
Author
Jennings, R.E.
Author_Institution
Lab. for Logic & Exp. Philos., Simon Fraser Univ., Vancouver, BC, Canada
fYear
2004
fDate
16-17 Aug. 2004
Firstpage
2
Abstract
Summary form only given. Language is primarily a physical, more particularly a biological phenomenon. To say that it is primarily so is to say that that is how, in the first instance, it presents itself to observation. It is curious then that theoreticians of language treat it as though it were primarily semantic or syntactic or a fusion of the two, and as though our implicit understanding of semantics and the syntax regulates both our language production and our language comprehension. The brain is both a repository of semantic and syntactic constraints, and is the instrument by which we draw upon these accounts for the hard currency of linguistic exchange. With this view comes a division of the vocables of language into those that carry semantic content (lexical vocabulary) and those that mark syntactic form (functional and logical vocabulary). Logical theory of the past 150 years has been understood by many as a purified abstraction of linguistic forms. So it is not surprising that the "logical" vocabulary of natural language has been understood in the reflected light of that formal science. Those internal transactions in which "logical" vocables essentially figure, the transactions that we think of as reasonings, are seen by many as constrained by those laws of thought that logic was thought to codify. Of course no vocabulary can be entirely independent of semantic understanding, but whereas the meaning of lexical vocabulary varies from context to context (run on the treadmill, run on the market, run-on sentence, etc.) logical vocabulary has fixed minimal semantic content independent of context.
Keywords
brain; formal logic; natural languages; programming language semantics; vocabulary; cognitive skills; evolutionary time-scale; formal science; functional vocabulary; human brain; human language; language comprehension; language development; language production; language semantics; lexical vocabulary; linguistic evolution; linguistic exchange; linguistic instruments; logical theory; logical vocabulary; molecular biological processes; natural language; natural monotonicity properties; prelinguistic ancestors; quasilinguistic ancestors; semantic constraints; semantic understanding; syntactic constraints; syntactic form; syntax regulation; Biological processes; Evolution (biology); Genetic mutations; Humans; Instruments; Laboratories; Logic; Natural languages; Production; Vocabulary;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Cognitive Informatics, 2004. Proceedings of the Third IEEE International Conference on
Print_ISBN
0-7695-2190-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/COGINF.2004.1327453
Filename
1327453
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