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Informationen zum Autor Philip Lieberman is Fred M. Seed Professor of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences and Professor of Anthropology at Brown University. Klappentext Evolution is opportunistic and has a "historic" logic of its own making. Existing structures and systems are adapted to serve new ends! often maintaining their original functions as well. Once a new behavior is in place! natural selection may then modify a structure to enhance that aspect of life; but some! or all! of the demands of the starting point may persist. ...the brain mechanisms that yield human syntax ability also have evolutionary antecedents outside the domain of language. The subcortical basal ganglia structures of the human brain that are critical elements of the neural systems that allow us to comprehend the meaning or to form a sentence also continue to support neural circuits that regulate motor control as well as aspects of cognition! mood! and much else. The evolutionary record of the changes that yielded human language is evident in the morphology and physiology of the brain and body; disputes concerning the evolution of language follow from different readings of the text. Uncertainty arises because the text has become obscured; the species who possessed intermediate stage of language are extinct.... Nonetheless! the situation is not hopeless...the present anatomy and physiology of the human brain and body reveal its evolutionary history! which! in turn! provides insights on the nature of the biologic bases of human cognition! language! and other aspects of human behavior. --from Chapter 1 Zusammenfassung In this forcefully argued book, the leading evolutionary theorist of language provides a framework for studying the evolution of human language and cognition. Philip Lieberman asserts that the widely influential theories of language’s development are inconsistent with principles and findings of evolutionary biology and neuroscience. Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface 1. The Mark of Evolution 2. Primitive and Derived Features of Language 3. The Singularity of Speech 4. The Neural Bases of Language 5. Motor Control and the Evolution of Language 6. The Gift of Tongue 7. Linguistic Issues 8. Where We Might Go Notes References Index ...