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March 2009
6 x 9, 432 pp., 21 illus.
$19.00/£12.95 (PAPER)
Short

Not for sale in France.

ISBN-10:
0-262-51253-X
ISBN-13:
978-0-262-51253-4

Other Editions
Cloth (2007)
Series
Bradford Books
Jean Nicod Lectures
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Language, Consciousness, Culture
Essays on Mental Structure
Ray Jackendoff

Series Forewordxv
Preface
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xvii
Acknowledgmentsxxiii
PART I
The Nicod Lectures
1
Chapter 1
Mental Structure
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3
1.1Locating the Study of Mental Structure in Cognitive Neuroscience3
1.2Mental "Structure" versus Mental "Representation"5
1.3The Mental Structures of a Simple Sentence7
1.4Relevance to Neuroscience13
1.5An Overall Vision of Mental Architecture16
1.6A Caution, and What Modularity Means22
Chapter 2
Reintegrating Generative Grammar
25
2.1Introduction25
2.2Three Founding Themes of Generative Grammar26
2.3The Broken Promise
Deep Structure Would Be the Key to the Mind
33
2.4A Scientific Mistake
Syntactocentrism
35
2.5Phonology as an Exemplar of the Parallel Architecture38
2.6The Syntax-Semantics Interface43
2.7The Outcome
Parallel Architecture
48
2.8Another Fundamental Mistake
The Lexicon/Grammar Distinction
53
2.9The Words-and-Rules Controversy60
2.10Four Ways the Parallel Architecture Helps Integrate Linguistics with Cognitive Neuroscience64
2.11Conclusions75
Chapter 3
Conscious and Unconscious Aspects of Language Structure
77
3.1The State of the Art77
3.2What Parts of Linguistic Are Conscious?80
3.3A Second Dimension of Consciousness
Valuation
87
3.4The Role of Attention in Consciousness98
3.5How Language Enhances Thought104
3.6Concluding Remarks, Including Evolution of Language Again107
Chapter 4
Shaking Hands and Making Coffee: The Structure of Complex Actions
111
4.1Introduction111
4.2Shaking Hands113
4.3Making Coffee123
4.4Building Structure130
4.5Summing Up139
Chapter 5
Cognition of Society and Culture
145
5.1Social Cognition as a Cognitive Capacity145
5.2Parallels with Linguistics147
5.3Objections from Social Science155
5.4A Role for Linguistics158
5.5The Physical and the Social/Personal Domains161
5.6Affiliations
Kinship, Alliances, Dominance
165
5.7Groups167
5.8Cooperation and Competition172
5.9Framing175
5.10Rules and Other Normative Principles178
5.11What Grounds Morality?
Where Science Bumps Up against Politics
183
PART II
The Structure of Social Cognition and Theory of Mind
189
Chapter 6
Perception Verbs and Theory of Mind
191
6.1Introduction to Part II
Overview of Conceptual Structure
192
6.2Actors and Patients/Undergoers197
6.3Experiencers and Stimuli204
6.4AFF, EXP, and Theory of Mind206
6.5The Mapping of EXP to Syntax208
6.6Experiencer Verbs without Overt Experiencers213
Chapter 7
Objective and Subjective Psychological and Evaluative Predicates
217
7.1The Problems217
7.2Classes of A¤ective/Evaluative Psychological Predicates218
7.3Experiencer-Subject Adjectives and Verbs224
7.4Stimulus-Subject Adjectives228
7.5Stimulus-Subject Verbs229
7.6Adding the Macrorole Tier234
7.7Valence in the Macrorole Tier
More Theory of Mind
237
7.8Why Subjective and Objective Systems?239
Chapter 8
Intending and Volitional Action
243
8.1Introduction243
8.2Animate Actions as a Special Class of Situations244
8.3Situational and Actional Attitudes247
8.4The Folk Metaphysics of Actional Attitudes254
8.5The Conceptual Structure of Believe and Intend255
8.6Doing Something Intentionally, the Volitionality of Action, and Imperatives262
8.7Fulfilling versus Voiding an Intention; Purposes268
8.8Joint Intentions272
8.9Conclusion275
Chapter 9
The Logic of Value
277
9.1Overview277
9.2Affective Value280
9.3Utility283
9.4Getting Into and Out Of the System284
9.5Resource Value, Quality, and Prowess287
9.6Normative Value and Personal Normative Value290
9.7Some Inferences Involving Normative Value293
9.8Esteem297
9.9Summary300
Chapter 10
Fairness, Reciprocity, and Exchange
305
10.1Fairness and Selfishness305
10.2Reciprocation, Retaliation, and Restitution312
10.3Honoring, Shaming, and Apologizing317
10.4Deserving319
10.5Exchange323
10.6Linguistic Expression of Exchange of Objects and Actions328
Chapter 11
Rights and Obligations
333
11.1Introduction333
11.2The Argument Structure of Rights and Obligations335
11.3What One Can Do with Rights and Obligations340
11.4Rights and Obligations Are Not Understood Metaphorically342
11.5Existentially versus Universally Quantified Rights and Obligations344
11.6The Fundamental Principles of Rights and Obligations
Consequences of Noncompliance
345
11.7Reciprocal Rights and Obligations350
11.8Authority351
11.9Where Does It Come From?354
Chapter 12
Trumpets and Drums
359
12.1Methodology in Studying Social Cognition and Theory of Mind359
12.2Theory of Mind and Social Cognition
What's Innate, and What's Special to Humans?
362
References369
Index
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393
 
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