What do you mean by Innatist theories? Discuss
Ans: Language acquisition is one of the central topics in cognitive science. Every theory of cognition has tried to explain it. Probably no other topic has aroused such controversy. Possessing a language is the quintessentially human trait: all normal humans speak, no nonhuman animal does.
Noam Chomsky argues that children are born with
a unique kind of knowledge which fits them for learning. This knowledge is
embodied in a mechanism called the Language Acquisition Device or LAD. Chomsky
believes that without postulating such a device it is impossible to understand
how children master their native language in such a short time in spite of the
highly abstract nature of the rules. This achievement would be particularly
difficult without LAD in view of the fact that the everyday speech to which
children are exposed is full of irregularities and deficiencies. According to
Chomsky, it would be impossible for a child to learn the abstract system of a
language from such degenerate data unless he had some prior knowledge about the
general character of natural languages. He argues that since children must be
equipped to learn any languages as a native language, the prior knowledge
embodied in LAD must constitute that which is common to all languages, in other
words, LAD must contain language universals. Universal Grammar specifies the
allowable mental representations and operations that all languages are confined
to use. The theory of universal grammar is closely tied to the theory of the
mental mechanisms children use in acquiring language; their hypotheses about
language must be couched in structures sanctioned by UG.
Chomsky argues his innateness hypothesis on
basically three counts. Firstly, the existence of language universals. It is
argued that the similarity in languages cannot possibly be due to anything
other than a specific cognitive capacity in man. Everybody learns a language,
not because they are subjected to a similar conditioning process, but because
they possess an inborn capacity which permits them to acquire a language as a
normal maturational process. This capacity is by definition universal.
The second count on which Chomsky argues his
innateness hypothesis is the fact of language learning itself. He argues that
the adult speech which a child hears around him is so poorly structured and
impaired in performance (by hesitations, repetitions, false starts and so on)
that he could not possibly learn language unless he brought to the task a very
specific capacity. The ultimate product of LAD is an internalized system of
rules which characterize the structure of a language, and which underlie both
comprehension and production.
The third and the last count on which the
innateness hypothesis is argued concerns the speed of acquisition of language.
Language could not be learnt with the speed at which it is done unless the
child was preprogrammed to do so.
According to behaviorists, the mind consisted of
sensorimotor abilities plus a few simple laws of learning, governing gradual
changes in an organism’s behavioral repertoire. Therefore, language must be
learned, it cannot be a module. And thinking must be a form of verbal behavior,
since verbal behavior is the prime manifestation of “thought” that can be
observed externally. Chomsky argued that language acquisition falsified these
beliefs in a single stroke: children learn languages that are governed by
highly subtle and abstract principles, and they do so without explicit
instruction or any other environmental clues to the nature of such principles.
Hence language acquisition depends on an innate, species-specific module that
is distinct from general intelligence. Much of the debate in language
acquisition has attempted to test this once-revolutionary, and still
controversial, collection of ideas.
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