复合题

For half a century an influential group of Western linguists, led by Noam Chomsky, have argued that language is an innate human faculty, the product of a “language organ’ ’ in the mind. Other prominent “innatists” include Steven Pinker, an evolutionary psychologist and author of “The Language Instinct” , and Derek Bickerton, a linguist at the University of Hawaii and developer of a “bioprogramme” theory of language. Innatists believe that all languages share fundamental features. And linguistic innatism is part of a wider debate about just how much of human nature is wired into the brain.

Daniel Everett, a linguist at Bentley University in Massachusetts, disagrees on both innatism and the fundamental similarity of languages. He spent years learning tiny languages in forbidding jungle villages, experiences he recounted in his 2008 memoir, “Don’ t Sleep, There Are Snakes” . In his new book, “Language: The Cultural Tool” , Mr. Everett moves away from narrow linguistic anthropology to broad theory.

He argues that language is not the product of a “language organ” but an extension of general intelligence.

Instead of unfolding in the same way in Paris and Papua New Guinea, languages are crafted by their speakers to meet their needs. He cites the Pirahii, the Brazilian Amazonian group he has spent the longest time living with. There are no numbers beyond two in Pirahii because, Mr. Everett argues, they have no money, engage in little barter trade, do not store food for the future and do not think about the distant past. This “living for the moment” , which the Pirahii enjoy (they think Western life sounds dreadful) , shapes their language.

That different cultures have different words is unsurprising. It is when these differences affect cognition (the Pirahii cannot do maths, for example) that things get interesting. But Mr. Everett’ s most controversial argument, and his biggest challenge to linguistic innatism, is about grammar.

Mr. Chomsky has argued that “recursion” is the key feature of all human language. This is the embedding of smaller units inside bigger ones: a subordinate clause is a kind of recursion, embedding a sentence in a bigger one. Mr. Everett says that the Pirahii lack grammatical recursion, and that even if recursion is universal (Piraha use it in stories if not within sentences) , this does not prove the existence of the language organ. Information is naturally organized with smaller bits nesting inside larger ones. That nearly all humans would find this linguistically useful is little different than widely varying societies independently inventing the bow and arrow— it is simply useful, and no proof of an instinct. True instincts, like turtles making their way to the sea or ducklings bonding with their mothers, require no learning. Language does. Animals do not truly excel in their deployment of basic instincts, whereas some humans clearly use language much better than others.

But Mr. Everett, in trying to reach a popular audience while making an argument aimed at professional linguists, makes some awkward compromises. He cites a paper by other researchers claiming to have found that there are no features that are common to all languages, an argument that is crucial to his thesis. But he does not give enough detail for the reader. Later he even contradicts himself, saying that all languages have nouns and verbs.

He argues that differences between societies lead to profound differences between languages, but fails to drive the point home fully. The Wari people use the word “hole” or “vagina” as the ordinary word for “wife” . Could this be denigrating of women? Or, since the birth canal is the point of departure for human life, could it be a way of praising them? Mr. Everett is not sure. Or take Banawa, another Amazonian language, in which the default gender of an unknown person or mixed group of people is feminine, not masculine as in most languages. The Banawa also practice rigid gender segregation, even whipping young girls bloody after their first menstruation. Could the unusual gender-assignment of Banawa be a product of this gender-segregated Banawa society? “The only answer at present is, ‘Perhaps’ , ” he writes. Even the lack of grammatical recursion in Piraha, Mr. Everett’ s key piece of evidence that it is culture that creates language, cannot tell the whole tale. Similar tribal cultures have languages bristling with recursion.

Mr. Everett thinks it possible that culture influences grammar, but he is not sure. He acknowledges that conjecture about what causes linguistic differences has been a staple of much irresponsible amateur linguistics. It is hard to work out where culture has affected language, where language affects culture and cognition (a hot topic of psycholinguistic research) , and where the differences are unrelated. Mr. Everett has taken a shot across the innatists’ bow, and an impressively modest and reasoned one given that Mr. Chomsky once called him a charlatan. His case is not wholly proven, but it deserves a serious reading, and a response beyond name-calling.

问答题 According to the passage, what are the major differences between Noam Chomsky and Daniel Everett regarding language?
【正确答案】Noam Chomsky thinks that language is an innate human faculty and there is recursion in all human languages, but Daniel Everett believes that language is an extension of general intelligence and differences between societies lead to profound differences between languages.
【答案解析】文章开篇即点明以诺姆· 乔姆斯基领头的语言学家支持的观点:语言是人类的先天能力。 文章第二段说到丹尼尔· 艾弗莱特对此持不同观点, 并在第三段点明其观点: 语言是一般智力的延伸。 后文又提到乔姆斯基认为人类语言具有递归性, 而艾弗莱特提出反例,认为社会差异对语言有影响, 而真正的先天能力不需学习。
问答题 What conclusion does Daniel Everett draw from the fact that the Pirahii do not have numbers beyond two?
【正确答案】Languages are crafted by their speakers to meet their needs.
【答案解析】根据题意定位至文章第四段。 该段提到艾弗莱特的研究对象——皮尔哈种群。 艾弗莱特提到皮尔哈没有货币, 很少物物交换。 这样的习惯塑造了他们的语言, 而这种语言中不存在超过两位数的数字。 由皮尔哈种群的习惯可推测, 皮尔哈人没有交易和货币, 不需要进行多少计算, 因此皮尔哈语缺乏数字。 因此可知语言是由使用者创造出来满足他们的需要的。
问答题 How do Noam Chomsky and Daniel Everett explain respectively the phenomenon that information is organized with small units inside larger ones?
【正确答案】Noam Chomsky uses the word “recursion” to refer to this phenomenon, stating that it’ s the key factor of all human language. Daniel Everett thinks it’ s natural, useful and has no proof of an instinct.
【答案解析】根据题意定位至文章第六段。 该段提到了所谓的“信息以小单位组织起来包含在大单位中” , 并提到了两位语言学家对这种现象的看法。 乔姆斯基用“递归性” 来概括这种现象并认为这是人类语言的关键要素。 而艾弗莱特认为这个现象是自然发生的, 有用但不能证明是本能。 
问答题 What is the weakness of Daniel Everett’ s argument in his new book, according to the author of the passage?
【正确答案】Daniel Everett doesn’ t give enough detail for the reader and later even contradicts himself.
【答案解析】根据题意定位至文章第七段。 该段提到艾弗莱特援引了其他研究者的论文, 表明了关键的观点, 但没有给出足够的细节, 后来甚至自相矛盾。
问答题 What is the author’ s attitude towards the debates between Daniel Everett and Noam Chomsky?
【正确答案】The author thinks that Everett’ s argument has some value and worth thinking, though his view is somewhat controversial.
【答案解析】文中提到艾弗莱特的观点有争议。 文章最后一段提到了作者的观点: “艾弗莱特提醒了先天派……他的情况并不能完全证明, 但是值得认真一读, 以及超越中伤之外的回应。 ” 这说明作者认为虽然艾弗莱特与乔姆斯基持有不同观点, 但他的观点值得认真阅读思考。