Language as a phenomenon of the third kind

Dabrowska E (2020)


Publication Language: English

Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2020

Journal

Book Volume: 31

Pages Range: 213-229

Journal Issue: 2

DOI: 10.1515/cog-2019-0029

Abstract

While many linguists view language as either a cognitive or a social phenomenon, it is clearly both: a language can live only in individual minds, but it is learned from examples of utterances produced by speakers engaged in communicative interaction. In other words, language is what (Keller 1994. On language change: The invisible hand in language. London: Taylor & Francis) calls a "phenomenon of the third kind", emerging from the interaction of a micro-level and a macro-level. Such a dual perspective helps us understand some otherwise puzzling phenomena, including "non-psychological" generalizations, or situations where a pattern which is arguably present in a language is not explicitly represented in most speakers' minds. This paper discusses two very different examples of such generalizations, genitive marking on masculine nouns in Polish and some restrictions on questions with long-distance dependencies in English. It is argued that such situations are possible because speakers may represent "the same" knowledge at different levels of abstraction: while a few may have extracted an abstract generalization, others approximate their behaviour by relying on memorised exemplars or lexically specific patterns. Thus, a cognitively realistic usage-based construction grammar needs to distinguish between patterns in the usage of a particular speech community (a social phenomenon) and patterns in speakers' minds (a cognitive phenomenon).

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How to cite

APA:

Dabrowska, E. (2020). Language as a phenomenon of the third kind. Cognitive Linguistics, 31(2), 213-229. https://dx.doi.org/10.1515/cog-2019-0029

MLA:

Dabrowska, Ewa. "Language as a phenomenon of the third kind." Cognitive Linguistics 31.2 (2020): 213-229.

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