Cultural selection for learnability: Three principles underlying the view that language adapts to be learnable

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Abstract

Here is a far-reaching and vitally important question for those seeking to understand the evolution of language: given a thorough understanding of whatever cognitive processes are relevant to learning, understanding, and producing language, would such an understanding enable us to predict the universal features of language? This question is important because, if met with an affirmative answer, then an explanation for why language evolved to exhibit certain forms and not others must be understood in terms of the biological evolution of the cognitive basis for language. After all, such an account pivots on the assumption that properties of the cognitive mechanisms supporting language map directly onto the universal features of language that we observe. We argue against this position, and note that the relation between language universals and any cognitive basis for language is opaque.

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Brighton, H., Kirby, S., & Smith, K. (2023). Cultural selection for learnability: Three principles underlying the view that language adapts to be learnable. In Language Origins: Perspectives on evolution (pp. 291–309). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199279036.003.0017

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