Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Introduction to Contemporary Linguistics For undergraduates Lecture 1 Human language In the beginning was the Word. -- Bible God created the world by a Word, instantaneously, without toil or pains. -- Talmud Both these pieces of scripture point to the primacy of language in the way human beings conceive of the world. Language figures centrally in our lives. We discover our identity as individuals and social beings when we acquire a language during childhood Language serves as a means of cognition and communication Language provides for present needs and future plans, and at the same time carries with it the impression of things past. -- Widdowson Other myths about language Babel Tower Functions of language recognized by ancient people To achieve something by giving order To praise the Almighty To challenge the heaven What exactly does a human being physically possess that embodies his outstanding capability? Muscle Hands Sensory organs Ability to think Ability to calculate Ability to speak Artificial intelligence To liberate our brain Language is uniquely human. People talk. They communicate their thoughts and experience, their hopes and fears to others; they transmit their accumulated knowledge and beliefs to their children, by means of oral sounds. Others listen and comprehend. These facts are true of all communities of human beings, from the most primitive to the most sophisticated. Language is uniquely human. We human beings can create new meanings and shape our own reality unconstrained by the immediate context. Any other species’ communication lacks such flexibility. As Bertrand Russell once observed: “No matter how eloquently a dog may bark, he cannot tell you that his parents were poor but honest”. Language is uniquely human. Any human baby can learn at least one language. The learning is spontaneous and effortless. However, no one knows how complex the mind of man operates to organize his experience and thoughts into communicable form anytime he speaks. Language as phenomena LANGUAGE AND LANGUAGES Language is the system of human communication which consists of the structured arrangement of sounds (or their written representation) into larger units, e.g. morphemes,words, sentences, utterances. Languages are particular systems of human communication, e.g. the French language, the Hindi language. Languages and countries Sometimes a language is spoken by most people in a particular country, for example, Japanese in Japan, but sometimes a language is spoken by only part of the population of a country, for example, Tamil in India, French in Canada. In some cases, there is a continuum from one language to another. Dialect A of Language X on one side of the border may be very similar to Dialect B of Language Y on the other side of the border if Language X and Language Y are related. This is the case between Sweden and Norway and between Germany and the Netherlands The scientific study of language or of particular languages is called linguistics. Varieties of language dialect accent sociolect temporal dialect register idiolect standard dialect Two attitudes: prescriptive descriptive Language as an entity TIME-HONORED PROBLEMS WHAT IS KNOWLEDGE OF LANGUAGE? WHERE DOES IT COME FROM? TRADITIONAL THEORIES OF Linguistics Plato (427?-347 B.C.) Aristotle (384-322 B.C.): There is a Language is universally correct arrived at by and acceptable convention and logic of language agreement of the for man to follow speakers of a in expressing his given language. ideas. DISPUTES IN MODERN LINGUISTICS NATIVISM MENTALISM There is a biological, physiological entity inside our brain which decides that we speak. BEHAVIORISM EMPIRICISM Our brain was blank when we were born. Language is a social, empirical entity. Chomsky’s epistemology of the knowledge of language Human beings are born with something that other species are not born with, i.e. human language faculty. The initial state of human language faculty is called UG. Due to the effect of later experience, our brain/mind develops from the initial state into the steady state, which corresponds to the competence of speaking a human language. UG universal grammar Every speaker knows a set of principles which apply to all languages and also a set of parameters that can vary from one language to another, but only within certain limits. Example People can accept: in the classroom (in English) きょうしつ 教室 に (in Japanese) but can’t accept in any language: the in classroom A principle: structural dependency A knowledge of language relies on knowing structural relationships in a sentence rather than looking at it as a sequence of words. PP (prepositional phrase) P NP DET in the N classroom PP (prepositional phrase) P DET the NP N in classroom PARAMETER: HEAD RIGHT PP (postposition phrase) NP P 教室 に PARAMETER: HEAD LEFT PP (preposition phrase) P NP DET in the N classroom According to Chomsky, Knowledge of language is the result of the interaction of UG and later experience. The process for human language faculty to grow inside human body along a geneticallypre-determined course resembles the way a human being grows two arms instead of two wings according to the magic of human genes. DIFFERENT VOICES CONNECTIONISM (EMERGENTISM) The mental-neural mechanisms responsible for both lexical and grammatical processing are not unique to language. The neural mechanisms that “do” language also do a lot of other things. DIFFERENT VOICES LEARNER’S VARIETY DeSaussure, Chomsky, indeed all researchers customarily take perfect mastery of a language to be the crucial case, and a perfect speaker’s linguistic knowledge – a speaker who has mastered a “real language” to perfection – to be the primary object of linguist’s efforts. -- Klein (1998) The object of inquiry Nature is a physical continuum. It does not break itself into physics, chemistry, psychology, linguistics, syntax, pragmatics, phonetics…, which are not facts but our decisions. They are different levels (perspectives) from which we talk about the world. fields in linguistics Phonology Morphology Syntax Semantics Pragmatics … Theory and discipline Linguistics is not a theory. Syntax is not a theory. Pragmatics is not a theory. They are all domains we circumscribe from the nature for the convenience of our understanding. Newton’s Gravity is a theory. Einstein’s Relativity is a theory. Darwin’s Evolution is a theory. Chomsky’s UG is a theory. Textbook Introduction to Contemporary Linguistics by Zheng Chao to be published two weeks later Course Website A course website has been established to provide informative, interactive, and dynamic support to the textbook. The keys to the exercises of each chapter are also offered there. The website address is www.lintroduction.com . Reading Recommendation Longman Dictionary of Language Teaching and Applied Linguistics. by Richards, J. el al,1998. 外语教育与研究出版社& Cambridge Uni. Press 牛津语言学入门丛书 Linguistics by H.G. Widdowson 上海外语教育出版社 2001 More recommendations in the textbook (p. 13) Teaching Not all the content of each chapter will be taught in class. Topics of each chapter will be dealt with from rearranged perspectives in classroom teaching . Students are encouraged to give their own ppt-aided presentation in class from the third lecture. Suggestions Preview and review each chapter; Dealing with all the exercises after class; Search the library for additional readings; Summarize what you have understood in a notebook; Share your interest and achievements with other students by discussion and contributing to our website. About final examination An all-inclusive test No term paper