Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://lib.hpu.edu.vn/handle/123456789/26573
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dc.contributor.authorTomasello, Michaelen_US
dc.date.accessioned2017-08-30T08:09:23Z
dc.date.available2017-08-30T08:09:23Z
dc.date.issued2010en_US
dc.identifier.isbn0262201771en_US
dc.identifier.isbn9780262201773en_US
dc.identifier.otherHPU5160426en_US
dc.identifier.urihttps://lib.hpu.edu.vn/handle/123456789/26573-
dc.description.abstractWinner, 2009 Eleanor Maccoby Book Award in Developmental Psychology, presented by the American Psychological Association. and Honorable Mention, Literature, Language & Linguistics category, 2008 PROSE Awards presented by the Professional/Scholarly Publishing Division of the Association of American Publishers. Human communication is grounded in fundamentally cooperative, even shared, intentions. In this original and provocative account of the evolutionary origins of human communication, Michael Tomasello connects the fundamentally cooperative structure of human communication (initially discovered by Paul Grice) to the especially cooperative structure of human (as opposed to other primate) social interaction. Tomasello argues that human cooperative communication rests on a psychological infrastructure of shared intentionality (joint attention, common ground), evolved originally for collaboration and culture more generally. The basic motives of the infrastructure are helping and sharing: humans communicate to request help, inform others of things helpfully, and share attitudes as a way of bonding within the cultural group. These cooperative motives each created different functional pressures for conventionalizing grammatical constructions. Requesting help in the immediate you-and-me and here-and-now, for example, required very little grammar, but informing and sharing required increasingly complex grammatical devices. Drawing on empirical research into gestural and vocal communication by great apes and human infants (much of it conducted by his own research team), Tomasello argues further that humans' cooperative communication emerged first in the natural gestures of pointing and pantomiming. Conventional communication, first gestural and then vocal, evolved only after humans already possessed these natural gestures and their shared intentionality infrastructure along with skills of cultural learning for creating and passing along jointly understood communicative conventions. Challenging the Chomskian view that linguistic knowledge is innate, Tomasello proposes instead that the most fundamental aspects of uniquely human communication are biological adaptations for cooperative social interaction in general and that the purely linguistic dimensions of human communication are cultural conventions and constructions created by and passed along within particular cultural groups. Jean Nicod Lectures A Bradford Booken_US
dc.format.extent409 p.en_US
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdfen_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherThe MIT Pressen_US
dc.subjectOrigins of human communicationen_US
dc.subjectHuman communicationen_US
dc.subjectLinguisticsen_US
dc.titleOrigins of human communicationen_US
dc.typeBooken_US
dc.size930Kben_US
dc.departmentSociologyen_US
Appears in Collections:Sociology

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