Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America.
University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, United States of America.
PLoS Biol. 2019 Nov 27;17(11):e3000539. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3000539. eCollection 2019 Nov.
In their Essay on the evolution of human language, Martins and Boeckx seek to refute what they call the "half-Merge fallacy"-the conclusion that the most elementary computational operation for human language syntax, binary set formation, or "Merge," evolved in a single step. We show that their argument collapses. It is based on a serious misunderstanding of binary set formation as well as formal language theory. Furthermore, their specific evolutionary scenario counterproposal for a "two-step" evolution of Merge does not work. Although we agree with their Essay on several points, including that there must have been many steps in the evolution of human language and the importance of understanding how language and language syntax are implemented in the brain, we disagree that there is any justification, empirical or conceptual, for the decomposition of binary set formation into separate steps.
在他们的《人类语言进化论》一文中,Martins 和 Boeckx 试图反驳所谓的“半合并谬论”——即人类语言句法的最基本计算操作,二元集形成,或“合并”,是一步进化而来的结论。我们表明他们的论点是站不住脚的。这是基于对二进制集形成以及形式语言理论的严重误解。此外,他们提出的“两步”进化“合并”的具体进化方案也不成立。尽管我们同意他们的文章在几个方面的观点,包括人类语言的进化一定经历了许多步骤,以及理解语言和语言语法在大脑中是如何实现的重要性,但我们不同意将二进制集形成分解成单独步骤有任何经验或概念上的理由。