The CEU Department of Cognitive Science cordially invites you to its public lecture
as part of the Summer University ` Understanding Communication and Understanding Minds:
The Role of Metarepresentation` course
by
Richard Moore, Berlin School of Mind and Brain, Humboldt University, Germany
Date: Thursday, July 30, 2016 - 16:30-18:00
Host: Ildiko Kiraly
Which came first: language or high-order metarepresentation?
On standard Gricean and neo-Gricean accounts of language development in ontogeny and
phylogeny (defended by Tomasello, Sperber and Wilson, and Scott-Phillips among others),
language acquisition becomes possible only when speakers are able to act with and
understand communicative intentions. Since acting with and understanding communicative
intentions is thought to require very sophisticated socio-cognitive abilities, including
the ability to entertain fourth order meta-representations, the possession of fourth-order
metarepresentational abilities is held to be a pre-requisite of language development. On
the standard view, it was the emergence of uniquely human abilities for high-order
metarepresentation in phylogeny that led to the evolution of language; and it is because
young children but not apes possess these abilities that they alone can acquire language.
For all that the standard view has been adopted by developmental psychologists, it faces
potentially insurmountable empirical obstacles. This is because while children start to
use words not long after their first birthday, current evidence suggests that they master
fourth-order metarepresentations only around the age of 11. Given this, I argue, standard
interpretations of the cognitive pre-requisites of Gricean communication must be wrong.
Against the standard view, I defend a 'minimally Gricean' account of intentional
communication, according to which the socio-cognitive abilities required for Gricean
communication are shared by both human and chimpanzees. I offer a new explanation of why
humans but not apes acquired language, and I defend the view that human abilities for
high-order metarepresentation are likely language dependent. In the course of developing
my position, I will also argue against the view (defended by Gergely and Csibra) that
ostensive eye contact constitutes a human-specific adaptation for understanding
communicative intentions.
Location: Department of Cognitive Science, CEU, Oktober 6 street 7, room 101.
See more at:
https://summeruniversity.ceu.edu/understanding-2016
We are looking forward to see you there!
Cognitive Science Events at CEU:
http://cognitivescience.ceu.edu/events
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