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Book Chapter

Is Language the Ultimate Artefact?

Details

Citation

Wheeler M (2007) Is Language the Ultimate Artefact?. In: Wallace B, Ross A, Davies JB & Anderson T (eds.) The Mind, the Body and the World: Psychology After Cognitivism?. Exeter: Imprint Academic, pp. 269-308. http://www.booksonix.com/imprint/bookshop/

Abstract
Andy Clark has argued that language is ¡°in many ways the ultimate artifact¡± (Clark 1997, p.218). Fuelling this conclusion is a view according to which the human brain is essentially no more than a patterncompleting device, while language is an external resource which is adaptively fitted to the human brain in such a way that it enables that brain to exceed its unaided (pattern-completing) cognitive capacities, in much the same way as a pair of scissors enables us to ¡°exploit our basic manipulative capacities to fulfill new ends¡± (Clark 1997, pp.193-4). How should we respond to this bold reconceptualization of our linguistic abilities? First we need to understand it properly. So I begin by identifying and unpacking (and making a small ¡°Heideggerian¡± amendment to) Clark¡¯s main language-specific claims. That done I take a step back. Clark¡¯s approach to language is generated from a theoretical perspective which sees cognition as distributed over brain, body, and world. So I continue my investigation of Clark¡¯s incursion into linguistic territory by uncovering and illustrating those key ideas from the overall distributed cognition research programme which are particularly relevant in the present context. I then use this analysis as a spring-board from which to examine a crucial issue that arises for Clark¡¯s account of language, namely linguistic inner rehearsal. I argue that while there is much to recommend in Clark¡¯s treatment of this issue, some significant difficulties remain to be overcome. Via this critique of Clark¡¯s position, alongside some proposals for how the revealed problems might be addressed, I hope to edge us that bit closer to a full understanding of our linguistic abilities.

Keywords
language; distributed cognition; inner rehearsal

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2007
URL
PublisherImprint Academic
Publisher URL
Place of publicationExeter
ISBN9781845400736

People (1)

Professor Michael Wheeler

Professor Michael Wheeler

Professor, Philosophy

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