Dimensions
154 x 229 x 16mm
Language, Mind and Politics.
Part of the 'Key Contemporary Thinkers' series.
Noam Chomsky is well known as a linguist and as a political thinker. He is less well known as a philosopher. This is unfortunate, because his philosophical work connects his political views and his work as a scientist of language. His rationalist philosophical views tie common-sense understandings of human action and decision (including political thought and action) to that human mental capacity we call language.
The key to Chomsky's overall intellectual project lies in what he has to say about a biologically based human nature. To explain his view of human nature, McGilvray begins by distinguishing common-sense understanding (which includes the domains of economic, social, political and linguistic behaviour) from scientific knowledge of the mind. He then outlines the picture of the mind that underlies the distinction between common sense and science. This picture of the mind is shown to develop from Chomsky's attempt to address some basic observations concerning how language is acquired and used - the "poverty of stimulus" and the "creative aspects of language use". Like some seventeenth-eighteenth- and nineteenth-century thinkers, Chomsky seeks to account for these observations by producing a rationalist account of human nature. McGilvray then explores the connection between this account of human nature and Chomsky's linguistic and political work.
Chomsky's revitalised rationalism has profound implications for both the science of the human mind (cognitive science) and for an understanding of human action. No responsible individual can afford to ignore it.
Suitable for second-year undergraduates and above in linguistics, philosophy, politics and political theory, sociology and social theory.