AN ANALYSIS OF PHONOLOGY AND LINGUISTIC INTERFACES AS A NEW CASE FOR A BIOPSYCHOLOGICAL FOUNDATION FOR LINGUISTICS
AN ANALYSIS OF PHONOLOGY AND LINGUISTIC INTERFACES AS A NEW CASE FOR A BIOPSYCHOLOGICAL FOUNDATION FOR LINGUISTICS
Author(s): Jonathan J. LifeSubject(s): Social Sciences
Published by: Addleton Academic Publishers
Keywords: philosophy; linguistics; philosophy of linguistics; phonetics; phonology; linguistic interfaces
Summary/Abstract: This paper explores the biology of natural languages at their phonological and formal levels. Phonology is both grounded in speech biology yet, at the same time, an abstraction from it. The building blocks and principles of phonology are abstracted from speech biology by the medium of psychological representation. Phonology is thus logically dependent on both human biology and psychology. The paper also explores the interfaces among phonology, morphology and syntax in natural languages. It discusses the applicability of the same scientific frameworks to both phonological and formal levels of linguistic representation. The technical and theoretical relations among formal and phonological grammatical components justify the hypothesis of a biopsychological foundation for all of core theoretical linguistics. pp. 203–231
Journal: Linguistic and Philosophical Investigations
- Issue Year: 2016
- Issue No: 15
- Page Range: 203-231
- Page Count: 29
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF