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Over the past two decades, Ray Jackendoff has persistently tackled
difficult issues in the theory of mind and related theories of
cognitive processing. Chief among his contributions is a formal theory
that elaborates the nature of language and its relationship to a broad
set of other domains.
Languages of the Mind provides convenient access to
Jackendoff's work over the past five years on the nature of mental
representations in a variety of cognitive domains, in the context of a
detailed theory of the level of conceptual structure developed in his
earlier books Semantics and Cognition and
Consciousness and the Computational Mind. The first two
chapters summarize the theory of levels of mental representation
("languages of the mind") and their relationships to each other and
show how conceptual structure can be approached along lines familiar
from syntactic and phonological theory. From this background,
subsequent chapters develop issues in word learning (and its
pertinence to the Piaget-Chomsky debate) and the relation of
conceptual structure to the understanding of physical space.
Further chapters apply the theory to domains outside of traditional
cognitive science. They include an approach to social and cultural
cognition modeled on first principles of linguistic theory, the
beginnings of a formal description of psychodynamic phenomena, and a
discussion of musical parsing and its relation to musical affect that
bears on current disputes in linguistic parsing. The final chapter
takes up a long-standing conflict between philosophical and
psychological approaches to the study of mind, arguing that mental
representations should be regarded purely in terms of the
combinatorial organization of brain states, and that the philosophical
insistence on the intentionality of mental states should be abandoned.
Ray Jackendoff is Professor of Linguistics at Brandeis
University.
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