Jump to content

Ray Jackendoff: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
AnomieBOT (talk | contribs)
m Dating maintenance tags: {{Fact}}
 
(69 intermediate revisions by 55 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|American linguist and philosophy professor}}
<!-- Deleted image removed: [[Image:Jackendoff.png|right|thumb|250px|Professor Ray Jackendoff in August 2007 at an Authors@Google event.|{{deletable image-caption|1=Tuesday, 31 March 2009}}]] -->
{{BLP one source|date=May 2023}}
'''Ray Jackendoff''' (born January 23, 1945) is an [[United States|American]] [[linguist]]. He is [[professor]] of [[philosophy]], Seth Merrin Chair in the [[Humanities]] and, with [[Daniel Dennett]], Co-director of the [[Center for Cognitive Studies]] at [[Tufts University]]. He has always straddled the boundary between [[generative linguistics]] and [[cognitive linguistics]], committed as he is both to the existence of an innate [[Universal Grammar]] (an important thesis of generative linguistics) and to giving an account of language that meshes well with the current understanding of the human mind and [[cognitive processes|cognition]] (the main purpose of cognitive linguistics).
{{Use mdy dates|date=June 2018}}
{{Infobox scientist
| name = Ray Jackendoff
| image = Ray Jackendoff.jpg
| alt =
| caption =
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1945|01|23}}
| birth_place =
| death_date = <!-- {{Death date and age|YYYY|MM|DD|1945|01|23}} (death date then birth date) -->
| death_place =
| residence =
| citizenship =
| nationality =
| fields = [[Generative grammar]], [[cognitive science]], [[music cognition]]
| workplaces = [[Tufts University|Tufts]], [[Brandeis University|Brandeis]]
| alma_mater = [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology|MIT]], [[Swarthmore College|Swarthmore]]
| doctoral_advisor = [[Noam Chomsky]]
| academic_advisors =
| doctoral_students =
| notable_students = [[Neil Cohn]]
| known_for =
| influences =
| influenced =
| awards = [[Fellow of the AAAS]]<br>[[Jean Nicod Prize]] <small>(2003)</small><br>[[Rumelhart Prize]] {{small|(2014)}}
| signature = <!--(filename only)-->
| signature_alt =
| footnotes =
}}


'''Ray Jackendoff''' (born January 23, 1945) is an American [[linguist]]. He is professor of philosophy, Seth Merrin Chair in the [[Humanities]] and, with [[Daniel Dennett]], co-director of the [[Center for Cognitive Studies]] at [[Tufts University]]. He has always straddled the boundary between [[generative linguistics]] and [[cognitive linguistics]], committed to both the existence of an innate [[universal grammar]] (an important thesis of generative linguistics) and to giving an account of language that is consistent with the current understanding of the human mind and [[cognitive processes|cognition]] (the main purpose of cognitive linguistics).
Jackendoff's [[research]] deals with the [[semantics]] of [[natural language]], its bearing on the formal structure of [[cognition]] and its [[lexical]] and syntactic expression. Jackendoff's theory of semantic form expression. He has also done extensive research on the relationship between conscious awareness and the computational theory of mind, on syntactic theory, and, with [[Fred Lerdahl]], on musical cognition. His theory of [[conceptual semantics]] developed into a comprehensive theory on the foundations of language, which indeed is the title of a recent monograph (2002): ''Foundations of Language. Brain, Meaning, Grammar, Evolution''. Much earlier, in his 1983 ''Semantics and Cognition'', he was one of the first linguists to integrate the vision faculty into his account of meaning and human language.


Jackendoff's research deals with the [[semantics]] of [[natural language]], its bearing on the formal structure of [[cognition]], and its [[lexical (semiotics)|lexical]] and syntactic expression. He has conducted extensive research on the relationship between conscious awareness and the [[computational theory of mind]], on syntactic theory, and, with [[Fred Lerdahl]], on [[music cognition|musical cognition]], culminating in their [[generative theory of tonal music]]. His theory of [[conceptual semantics]] developed into a comprehensive theory on the foundations of language, which indeed is the title of a monograph (2002): ''Foundations of Language. Brain, Meaning, Grammar, Evolution''. In his 1983 ''Semantics and Cognition'', he was one of the first linguists to integrate the visual faculty into his account of meaning and human language.
He was awarded the [[Jean Nicod Prize]] in [[Paris]] in 2003. Tufts and Rutgers are the only universities in the United States to have two former Jean Nicod Prize Winners on their faculty (the other being [[Daniel Dennett]] at Tufts; [[Jerry Fodor]] and [[Zenon Pylyshyn]] at Rutgers).


Jackendoff studied under the famed linguists [[Noam Chomsky]] and [[Morris Halle]] at the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]], where he received his [[PhD]] in linguistics in 1969. Both Chomsky and Halle are now [[Institute Professor]]s emeriti at MIT.
Jackendoff studied under linguists [[Noam Chomsky]] and [[Morris Halle]] at the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]], where he received his PhD in linguistics in 1969. Before moving to [[Tufts]] in 2005, Jackendoff was professor of linguistics and chair of the linguistics program at [[Brandeis University]] from 1971 to 2005. During the 2009 spring semester, he was an external professor at the [[Santa Fe Institute]]. Jackendoff was awarded the [[Jean Nicod Prize]] in 2003. He received the 2014 [[Rumelhart Prize|David E. Rumelhart Prize]]. He has also been granted honorary degrees by the Université du Québec à Montréal (2010), the National Music University of Bucharest (2011), the Music Academy of Cluj-Napoca (2011), the Ohio State University (2012), and Tel Aviv University (2013).


==Interfaces and generative grammar==
Before moving to [[Tufts]] in 2005, Jackendoff was [[professor]] of linguistics and Chair of the Linguistics Program at [[Brandeis University]] from 1971 to 2005. During the 2009 spring semester, he was an external professor at the [[Santa Fe Institute]].
Jackendoff argues against a syntax-centered view of [[generative grammar]] (which he calls ''syntactocentrism''), at variance with earlier models such as the standard theory (1968), the extended standard theory (1972), the revised extended standard theory (1975), the [[government and binding theory]] (1981), and the [[minimalist program]] (1993), in which syntax is the sole generative component in the language. Jackendoff takes syntax, semantics, and phonology all to be generative, interconnected via interface components. The task of his theory is to formalize the proper interface rules.


While rejecting mainstream generative grammar due to its syntactocentrism, the [[cognitive semantics]] school has offered an insight that Jackendoff would sympathize with{{fact|date=August 2024}}<!--This is worded like speculation and if so, needs to be attributed. If, on the other hand, the source is actually Jackendoff, the use of 'would' is inappropriate.-->, namely, that meaning is a separate combinatorial system not entirely dependent upon syntax. Unlike many of the cognitive semantics approaches, he contends that neither syntax alone should determine semantics, nor vice versa. Syntax need only interface with semantics to the degree necessary to produce properly ordered phonological output (see Jackendoff 1996, 2002; Culicover & Jackendoff 2005).
== Interfaces and generative grammar==
Jackendoff argues against a syntax-centered view of [[generative grammar]] (called ''syntactocentrism'' by him), at variance with earlier models such as Standard Theory (1968); Extended Standard Theory (1972); Revised Extended Standard Theory (1975); [[Government and binding theory]] (1981); [[Linguistic minimalism|Minimalist Program]] (1993), in which syntax is the sole generative component in the language. Jackendoff takes syntax, semantics and phonology all to be generative, connected amongst each other via interface components. Thus, the task of his theory is to formalize the proper interface rules.

While rejecting mainstream generative grammar due to its syntactocentrism, the [[cognitive semantics]] school has offered an insight that Jackendoff would sympathize with, namely, that meaning is a separate combinatorial system not entirely dependent upon syntax. Unlike many of the cognitive semantics approaches, he contends that neither syntax alone should determine semantics, nor vice-versa. Syntax need only interface with semantics to the degree necessary to produce properly ordered phonological output (see Jackendoff 1996, 2002, 2005).


==Contribution to musical cognition==
==Contribution to musical cognition==
Jackendoff, together with [[Fred Lerdahl]], has been interested in the human capacity for music and its relationship to the human capacity for language. In particular, music has structure as well as [[grammar]] (a means by which sounds are combined into structures). When a listener hears music in an [[idiom]] he or she is familiar with, the music is not merely heard as a stream of sounds; rather, the listener constructs an unconscious understanding of the music and is able to understand pieces of music never heard previously. Jackendoff is interested in what cognitive structures or "mental [[representations]]" this understanding consists of in the listener's mind, how a listener comes to acquire the musical grammar necessary to understand a particular musical idiom, what [[innate]] resources in the human mind make this acquisition possible and, finally, what parts of the human music capacity are governed by general cognitive functions and what parts result from specialized functions geared specifically for music (Jackendoff & Lerdahl, 1983; Lerdahl, 2001). Similar questions have also been raised regarding human language, although there are differences. For instance, it is more likely that humans evolved a specialized language [[mental module|module]] than having evolved one for music, since even the specialized aspects of music comprehension are tied to more general cognitive functions <ref>[http://ase.tufts.edu/cogstud/incbios/RayJackendoff/MusicCapacity.pdf Jackendoff, R.& Lerdahl, F. The human music capacity: what is it and what's special about it?, ''Cognition'',100, 33-72 (2006).]</ref>
Jackendoff, together with [[Fred Lerdahl]], has been interested in the human capacity for music and its relationship to the human capacity for language. In particular, music has structure as well as a "grammar" (a means by which sounds are combined into structures). When a listener hears music in an [[idiom]] he or she is familiar with, the music is not merely heard as a stream of sounds; rather, the listener constructs an unconscious understanding of the music and is able to understand pieces of music never heard previously. Jackendoff is interested in what cognitive structures or "[[mental representation]]s" this understanding consists of in the listener's mind, how a listener comes to acquire the musical grammar necessary to understand a particular musical idiom, what innate resources in the human mind make this acquisition possible and, finally, what parts of the human music capacity are governed by general cognitive functions and what parts result from specialized functions geared specifically for music (Jackendoff & Lerdahl, 1983; Lerdahl, 2001). Similar questions have also been raised regarding human language, although there are differences. For instance, it is more likely that humans evolved a specialized language [[mental module|module]] than having evolved one for music, since even the specialized aspects of music comprehension are tied to more general cognitive functions.<ref>[http://ase.tufts.edu/cogstud/incbios/RayJackendoff/MusicCapacity.pdf Jackendoff, R.& Lerdahl, F. The capacity for music: what is it and what's special about it?, ''Cognition'',100, 33–72 (2006).]</ref>


==References==
==Selected works==
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 1972 | title = Semantic Interpretation in Generative Grammar | url = https://archive.org/details/semanticinterpre0000jack | url-access = registration | pages= [https://archive.org/details/semanticinterpre0000jack/page/400 400] | publisher = [[MIT Press]] | location = Cambridge, Massachusetts | isbn = 0-262-10013-4}}
===Selected works===
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 1972 | title = Semantic Interpretation in Generative Grammar | pages= 400 | publisher = MIT Press | location = Cambridge, MA | isbn = 0-262-10013-4}}
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 1977 | title = X-Bar Syntax: A Study of Phrase Structure | pages = [https://archive.org/details/xsyntaxstudyofph0000jack/page/248 248] | publisher = MIT Press | location = Cambridge, Massachusetts | isbn = 0-262-10018-5 | url = https://archive.org/details/xsyntaxstudyofph0000jack/page/248 }}
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 1977 | title = X-bar Syntax: A Study of Phrase Structure | pages= 248 | publisher = MIT Press | location = Cambridge, MA | isbn = 0-262-10018-5}}
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 1983 | title = Semantics and Cognition | pages = [https://archive.org/details/semanticscogniti00jack/page/283 283] | publisher = MIT Press | location = Cambridge, Massachusetts | isbn = 0-262-10027-4 | url-access = registration | url = https://archive.org/details/semanticscogniti00jack/page/283 }}
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 1983 | title = Semantics and Cognition | pages= 283 | publisher = MIT Press | location = Cambridge, Mass. | isbn = 0-262-10027-4}}
* {{cite book |author1=Lerdahl, Fred |author2=Ray Jackendoff | year = 1983 | title = A Generative Theory of Tonal Music |url=https://archive.org/details/generativetheory0000lerd |url-access=registration | pages= [https://archive.org/details/generativetheory0000lerd/page/369 369] | publisher = MIT Press | location = Cambridge, Massachusetts | isbn = 0-262-12094-1}}
* {{cite book | author = Lerdahl, Fred &amp; Ray Jackendoff | year = 1983 | title = A Generative Theory of Tonal Music | pages= 369 | publisher = MIT Press | location = Cambridge, MA | isbn = 0-262-12094-1}}
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 1987 | title = Consciousness and the Computational Mind | url = https://archive.org/details/consciousnesscom0000jack | url-access = registration | pages = [https://archive.org/details/consciousnesscom0000jack/page/356 356] | publisher = MIT Press | location = Cambridge, Massachusetts | isbn = 0-262-10037-1}}
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 1987 | title = Consciousness and the Computational Mind | pages = 356 | publisher = MIT Press | location = Cambridge, Mass. | isbn = 0-262-10037-1}}
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 1990 | title = Semantic Structures | url = https://archive.org/details/semanticstructur0000jack | url-access = registration | pages= [https://archive.org/details/semanticstructur0000jack/page/322 322] | publisher = MIT Press | location = Cambridge, Massachusetts | isbn = 0-262-10043-6 }}
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 1990 | title = Semantic Structures | pages= 322 | publisher = MIT Press | location = Cambridge, MA | isbn = 0-262-10043-6 }}
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 1992 | title = Languages of the Mind: Essays on Mental Representation | pages = 200 | publisher = MIT Press | location = Cambridge, Massachusetts | isbn = 0-262-10047-9}}
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 1992 | title = Languages of the Mind: Essays on Mental Representation | pages = 200 | publisher = MIT Press | location = Cambridge, MA | isbn = 0-262-10047-9}}
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 1993 | title = Patterns in the Mind: Language and Human Nature | pages= 243 | publisher = Harvester Wheatsheaf | location = New York, NY | isbn = 0-7450-0962-X}}
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 1993 | title = Patterns in the Mind: Language and Human Nature | pages= 243 | publisher = Harvester Wheatsheaf | location = New York, NY | isbn = 0-7450-0962-X}}
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 1997 | title = The Architecture of the Language Faculty | pages = 262 | publisher = MIT Press | location = Cambridge, MA | isbn = 0-262-10059-2}}
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 1997 | title = The Architecture of the Language Faculty | url = https://archive.org/details/architecturelang00jack | url-access = limited | pages = [https://archive.org/details/architecturelang00jack/page/n277 262] | publisher = MIT Press | location = Cambridge, Massachusetts | isbn = 0-262-10059-2}}
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 2002 | title = Foundations of Language: Brain, Meaning, Grammar, Evolution | pages = 477 | publisher = Oxford University Press | location = Oxford | isbn = 0-19-827012-7}}
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 2002 | title = Foundations of Language: Brain, Meaning, Grammar, Evolution | pages = 477 | publisher = Oxford University Press | location = Oxford | isbn = 0-19-827012-7}}
* {{cite book | author= Culicover, Peter W. &amp; Ray Jackendoff | year = 2005 | title = [[Simpler syntax]] | pages = 589 | publisher = Oxford University Press | location = Oxford | isbn = 0-19-927108-9}}
* {{cite book |author1=Culicover, Peter W. |author2=Ray Jackendoff | year = 2005 | title = [[Simpler syntax]] | pages = 589 | publisher = Oxford University Press | location = Oxford | isbn = 0-19-927108-9}}
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 2007 | title = Language, Consciousness, Culture: Essays on Mental Structure (Jean Nicod Lectures) | pages = 403 | publisher = MIT Press | location = Cambridge, MA | isbn = 0-262-10119-X}}
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 2007 | title = Language, Consciousness, Culture: Essays on Mental Structure (Jean Nicod Lectures) | url = https://archive.org/details/languageconsciou00jack | url-access = limited | pages = [https://archive.org/details/languageconsciou00jack/page/n429 403] | publisher = MIT Press | location = Cambridge, Massachusetts | isbn = 978-0-262-10119-6}}
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 2010 | title = Meaning and the Lexicon: The Parallel Architecture 1975&ndash;2010 | pages = 504 | publisher = Oxford University Press | location = Oxford | isbn = 0-19-956888-X}}
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 2010 | title = Meaning and the Lexicon: The Parallel Architecture 1975–2010 | pages = 504 | publisher = Oxford University Press | location = Oxford | isbn = 978-0-19-956888-8}}
* {{cite book | author = Jackendoff, Ray | year = 2012 | title = A User's Guide to Thought and Meaning | pages = 274 | publisher = Oxford University Press | location = Oxford | isbn = 978-0-19-969320-7}}

===Footnotes===
{{Reflist}}


==See also==
==See also==
*[[Conceptual Semantics]]
*[[Conceptual semantics]]
*[[Mentalist Postulate]]
*[[Mentalist postulate]]
*[[Jean Nicod Prize|List of Jean Nicod Prize laureates]]
*[[Jean Nicod Prize|List of Jean Nicod Prize laureates]]
*[[X-bar theory]]
*[[X-bar theory]]

==References==
{{Reflist}}


==External links==
==External links==
*[http://ase.tufts.edu/philosophy/people/jackendoff.shtml Website at Tufts University]
*[http://ase.tufts.edu/cogstud/jackendoff/index.html Website at Tufts University]
*[http://ase.tufts.edu/cogstud/ Center for Cognitive Studies at Tufts University]
*[http://ase.tufts.edu/cogstud/ Center for Cognitive Studies at Tufts University]
*[http://blip.tv/file/509192 Ray Jackendoff, Conceptual Semantics, Harvard University, 13 November 2007 (video)]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20080928152118/http://blip.tv/file/509192 Ray Jackendoff, Conceptual Semantics, Harvard University, 13 November 2007 (video)]
*[http://internalism.googlegroups.com/web/Jackendoff%20-%20Semantics%20and%20cognition.pdf?gda=NnGiQVkAAADy552aSClb4ITRvY_uh1wg1HlZwQx1sWdg19XYVi-vtGG1qiJ7UbTIup-M2XPURDQygvGqyvkEdDeFrqZpbhAaiiQlHDGiKbzxcInHK4Ga8wkBfGCcUDOOFolhD-ndPQM ''Semantics and Cognition''], in Shalom Lappin (1996), "The Handbook of Contemporary Semantic Theory", 539-559. Oxford: Blackwell.
*[http://internalism.googlegroups.com/web/Jackendoff%20-%20Semantics%20and%20cognition.pdf?gda=NnGiQVkAAADy552aSClb4ITRvY_uh1wg1HlZwQx1sWdg19XYVi-vtGG1qiJ7UbTIup-M2XPURDQygvGqyvkEdDeFrqZpbhAaiiQlHDGiKbzxcInHK4Ga8wkBfGCcUDOOFolhD-ndPQM ''Semantics and Cognition''], in Shalom Lappin (1996), "The Handbook of Contemporary Semantic Theory", 539–559. Oxford: Blackwell.
*[http://www.isrl.uiuc.edu/~amag/langev/localcopy/pdf/jackendoff99possibleStages.pdf ''Possible stages in the evolution of the language capacity''], Trends in Cognitive Sciences, Vol. 3, No. 7 (July 1999).
*[http://www.isrl.uiuc.edu/~amag/langev/localcopy/pdf/jackendoff99possibleStages.pdf ''Possible stages in the evolution of the language capacity''], Trends in Cognitive Sciences, Vol. 3, No. 7 (July 1999).

{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Jackendoff, Ray}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Jackendoff, Ray}}
[[Category:1945 births]]
[[Category:1945 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:American linguists]]
[[Category:Linguists from the United States]]
[[Category:Semanticists]]
[[Category:Semanticists]]
[[Category:Syntacticians]]
[[Category:Syntacticians]]
[[Category:Cognitive scientists]]
[[Category:Brandeis University faculty]]
[[Category:Brandeis University faculty]]
[[Category:Tufts University faculty]]
[[Category:Tufts University faculty]]
Line 62: Line 89:
[[Category:Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences]]
[[Category:Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences]]
[[Category:Jean Nicod Prize laureates]]
[[Category:Jean Nicod Prize laureates]]
[[Category:Rumelhart Prize laureates]]

[[Category:Santa Fe Institute people]]
[[bn:রে জ্যাকেন্ডফ]]
[[Category:Fellows of the Cognitive Science Society]]
[[bg:Рей Джакендоф]]
[[Category:Linguistic Society of America presidents]]
[[de:Ray Jackendoff]]
[[Category:Fellows of the Linguistic Society of America]]
[[fr:Ray Jackendoff]]
[[Category:Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni]]
[[ja:レイ・ジャッケンドフ]]
[[pl:Ray Jackendoff]]
[[tr:Ray Jackendoff]]

Latest revision as of 02:29, 20 August 2024

Ray Jackendoff
Born (1945-01-23) January 23, 1945 (age 79)
Alma materMIT, Swarthmore
AwardsFellow of the AAAS
Jean Nicod Prize (2003)
Rumelhart Prize (2014)
Scientific career
FieldsGenerative grammar, cognitive science, music cognition
InstitutionsTufts, Brandeis
Doctoral advisorNoam Chomsky
Notable studentsNeil Cohn

Ray Jackendoff (born January 23, 1945) is an American linguist. He is professor of philosophy, Seth Merrin Chair in the Humanities and, with Daniel Dennett, co-director of the Center for Cognitive Studies at Tufts University. He has always straddled the boundary between generative linguistics and cognitive linguistics, committed to both the existence of an innate universal grammar (an important thesis of generative linguistics) and to giving an account of language that is consistent with the current understanding of the human mind and cognition (the main purpose of cognitive linguistics).

Jackendoff's research deals with the semantics of natural language, its bearing on the formal structure of cognition, and its lexical and syntactic expression. He has conducted extensive research on the relationship between conscious awareness and the computational theory of mind, on syntactic theory, and, with Fred Lerdahl, on musical cognition, culminating in their generative theory of tonal music. His theory of conceptual semantics developed into a comprehensive theory on the foundations of language, which indeed is the title of a monograph (2002): Foundations of Language. Brain, Meaning, Grammar, Evolution. In his 1983 Semantics and Cognition, he was one of the first linguists to integrate the visual faculty into his account of meaning and human language.

Jackendoff studied under linguists Noam Chomsky and Morris Halle at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received his PhD in linguistics in 1969. Before moving to Tufts in 2005, Jackendoff was professor of linguistics and chair of the linguistics program at Brandeis University from 1971 to 2005. During the 2009 spring semester, he was an external professor at the Santa Fe Institute. Jackendoff was awarded the Jean Nicod Prize in 2003. He received the 2014 David E. Rumelhart Prize. He has also been granted honorary degrees by the Université du Québec à Montréal (2010), the National Music University of Bucharest (2011), the Music Academy of Cluj-Napoca (2011), the Ohio State University (2012), and Tel Aviv University (2013).

Interfaces and generative grammar

[edit]

Jackendoff argues against a syntax-centered view of generative grammar (which he calls syntactocentrism), at variance with earlier models such as the standard theory (1968), the extended standard theory (1972), the revised extended standard theory (1975), the government and binding theory (1981), and the minimalist program (1993), in which syntax is the sole generative component in the language. Jackendoff takes syntax, semantics, and phonology all to be generative, interconnected via interface components. The task of his theory is to formalize the proper interface rules.

While rejecting mainstream generative grammar due to its syntactocentrism, the cognitive semantics school has offered an insight that Jackendoff would sympathize with[citation needed], namely, that meaning is a separate combinatorial system not entirely dependent upon syntax. Unlike many of the cognitive semantics approaches, he contends that neither syntax alone should determine semantics, nor vice versa. Syntax need only interface with semantics to the degree necessary to produce properly ordered phonological output (see Jackendoff 1996, 2002; Culicover & Jackendoff 2005).

Contribution to musical cognition

[edit]

Jackendoff, together with Fred Lerdahl, has been interested in the human capacity for music and its relationship to the human capacity for language. In particular, music has structure as well as a "grammar" (a means by which sounds are combined into structures). When a listener hears music in an idiom he or she is familiar with, the music is not merely heard as a stream of sounds; rather, the listener constructs an unconscious understanding of the music and is able to understand pieces of music never heard previously. Jackendoff is interested in what cognitive structures or "mental representations" this understanding consists of in the listener's mind, how a listener comes to acquire the musical grammar necessary to understand a particular musical idiom, what innate resources in the human mind make this acquisition possible and, finally, what parts of the human music capacity are governed by general cognitive functions and what parts result from specialized functions geared specifically for music (Jackendoff & Lerdahl, 1983; Lerdahl, 2001). Similar questions have also been raised regarding human language, although there are differences. For instance, it is more likely that humans evolved a specialized language module than having evolved one for music, since even the specialized aspects of music comprehension are tied to more general cognitive functions.[1]

Selected works

[edit]
  • Jackendoff, Ray (1972). Semantic Interpretation in Generative Grammar. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. pp. 400. ISBN 0-262-10013-4.
  • Jackendoff, Ray (1977). X-Bar Syntax: A Study of Phrase Structure. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. pp. 248. ISBN 0-262-10018-5.
  • Jackendoff, Ray (1983). Semantics and Cognition. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. pp. 283. ISBN 0-262-10027-4.
  • Lerdahl, Fred; Ray Jackendoff (1983). A Generative Theory of Tonal Music. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. pp. 369. ISBN 0-262-12094-1.
  • Jackendoff, Ray (1987). Consciousness and the Computational Mind. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. pp. 356. ISBN 0-262-10037-1.
  • Jackendoff, Ray (1990). Semantic Structures. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. pp. 322. ISBN 0-262-10043-6.
  • Jackendoff, Ray (1992). Languages of the Mind: Essays on Mental Representation. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. p. 200. ISBN 0-262-10047-9.
  • Jackendoff, Ray (1993). Patterns in the Mind: Language and Human Nature. New York, NY: Harvester Wheatsheaf. p. 243. ISBN 0-7450-0962-X.
  • Jackendoff, Ray (1997). The Architecture of the Language Faculty. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. pp. 262. ISBN 0-262-10059-2.
  • Jackendoff, Ray (2002). Foundations of Language: Brain, Meaning, Grammar, Evolution. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 477. ISBN 0-19-827012-7.
  • Culicover, Peter W.; Ray Jackendoff (2005). Simpler syntax. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 589. ISBN 0-19-927108-9.
  • Jackendoff, Ray (2007). Language, Consciousness, Culture: Essays on Mental Structure (Jean Nicod Lectures). Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. pp. 403. ISBN 978-0-262-10119-6.
  • Jackendoff, Ray (2010). Meaning and the Lexicon: The Parallel Architecture 1975–2010. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 504. ISBN 978-0-19-956888-8.
  • Jackendoff, Ray (2012). A User's Guide to Thought and Meaning. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 274. ISBN 978-0-19-969320-7.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]