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      The myth of language universals: language diversity and its importance for cognitive science.

      1 ,
      The Behavioral and brain sciences
      Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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          Abstract

          Talk of linguistic universals has given cognitive scientists the impression that languages are all built to a common pattern. In fact, there are vanishingly few universals of language in the direct sense that all languages exhibit them. Instead, diversity can be found at almost every level of linguistic organization. This fundamentally changes the object of enquiry from a cognitive science perspective. This target article summarizes decades of cross-linguistic work by typologists and descriptive linguists, showing just how few and unprofound the universal characteristics of language are, once we honestly confront the diversity offered to us by the world's 6,000 to 8,000 languages. After surveying the various uses of "universal," we illustrate the ways languages vary radically in sound, meaning, and syntactic organization, and then we examine in more detail the core grammatical machinery of recursion, constituency, and grammatical relations. Although there are significant recurrent patterns in organization, these are better explained as stable engineering solutions satisfying multiple design constraints, reflecting both cultural-historical factors and the constraints of human cognition. Linguistic diversity then becomes the crucial datum for cognitive science: we are the only species with a communication system that is fundamentally variable at all levels. Recognizing the true extent of structural diversity in human language opens up exciting new research directions for cognitive scientists, offering thousands of different natural experiments given by different languages, with new opportunities for dialogue with biological paradigms concerned with change and diversity, and confronting us with the extraordinary plasticity of the highest human skills.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Behav Brain Sci
          The Behavioral and brain sciences
          Cambridge University Press (CUP)
          1469-1825
          0140-525X
          Oct 2009
          : 32
          : 5
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Linguistics, Research School of Asian and Pacific Studies, Australian National University, ACT 0200, Australia. nicholas.evans@anu.edu.au
          Article
          S0140525X0999094X
          10.1017/S0140525X0999094X
          19857320
          7ca53f13-1e54-402a-bb28-d13d207cb3e0
          History

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