In:History of Linguistics 2017: Selected papers from the 14th International Conference on the History of the Language Sciences, (ICHoLS 14), Paris, 28 August – 1 September
Edited by Émilie Aussant and Jean-Michel Fortis
[Studies in the History of the Language Sciences 127] 2020
► pp. 157–170
On the reception and revivification of Cartesian linguistics
Published online: 20 May 2020
https://doi.org/10.1075/sihols.127.11tho
https://doi.org/10.1075/sihols.127.11tho
Abstract
Fifty years after its publication, it is timely to return
to Noam Chomsky’s Cartesian linguistics to explore
what this controversial text accomplished, what it didn’t
accomplish, and for whom. I begin with the context of midcentury
American linguists’ historical consciousness into which
Cartesian linguistics initially appeared, then
review responses to the book by (first) philosophers and historians
of linguistics, and (second) generative linguists versus linguists
not associated with generativism, especially those in the United
States. I evaluate whether the book achieved Chomsky’s own goals,
then close by calling attention to an emerging second life of
Cartesian linguistics, beginning around
2000.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.American historiography of linguistics before 1966
- 3.Response to Cartesian linguistics from philosophers and historians of linguistics
- 4.Response of linguists
- 5.Did Cartesian linguistics meet Chomsky’s own goals?
- 6.Cartesian linguistics in the twenty-first century
- 7.Conclusion
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