Episode #426 from 2:13:54

Nature vs nurture

To what degree is language, this is returning to Chomsky a little bit, is innate. You said that for Chomsky, you used the idea that language is, some aspects of language are innate to explain away certain things that are observed. How much are we born with language at the core of our mind brain? The answer is, I don't know, of course. I'm an engineer at heart, I guess and I think it's fine to postulate that a lot of it's learned. And so I'm guessing that a lot of it's learned. I think the reason Chomsky went with innateness is because he hypothesized movement in his grammar. He was interested in grammar and movement's hard to learn. I think he's right movement. It's a hard thing to learn, to learn these two things together and how they interact. And there's a lot of ways in which you might generate exactly the same sentences and it's really hard.

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To what degree is language, this is returning to Chomsky a little bit, is innate. You said that for Chomsky, you used the idea that language is, some aspects of language are innate to explain away certain things that are observed. How much are we born with language at the core of our mind brain? The answer is, I don't know, of course. I'm an engineer at heart, I guess and I think it's fine to postulate that a lot of it's learned. And so I'm guessing that a lot of it's learned. I think the reason Chomsky went with innateness is because he hypothesized movement in his grammar. He was interested in grammar and movement's hard to learn. I think he's right movement. It's a hard thing to learn, to learn these two things together and how they interact. And there's a lot of ways in which you might generate exactly the same sentences and it's really hard.

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Nature vs nurture chapter timestamp | Edward Gibson: Human Language, Psycholinguistics, Syntax, Grammar & LLMs | EpisodeIndex