Noam Chomsky - The Structure of Language

Source: • Day at Night: Noam Cho...

Пікірлер: 278

  • @hirotakakawano7212
    @hirotakakawano72122 жыл бұрын

    The concept of universal grammar not only leads to an innovative understanding of linguistics, ideas, philosophy, and history, but also to an understanding of human nature, value of existence, and the distinction between humans and other living things.

  • @IsThereAPubeOnMyHead
    @IsThereAPubeOnMyHead5 жыл бұрын

    unfortunate that the interviewer kept interrupting and didn't let Chomsky finish his trains of thought

  • @augustosantos708

    @augustosantos708

    4 жыл бұрын

    that was my first anger of the day, and it is 4:32pm.

  • @hxd3620

    @hxd3620

    3 жыл бұрын

    Fuck him

  • @Widmowiec

    @Widmowiec

    3 жыл бұрын

    When you think about how precious everything Chomsky says is up til now, it is even more frustrating that we shall never hear the ending of his thoughts like: "What you’re taught in school is some relatively superficial set of generalizations..."

  • @bigdilf314

    @bigdilf314

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Widmowiec exactly, i was writing that down for my notes for my linguistics course and the interviewer cut him right off

  • @oriana_fortunato

    @oriana_fortunato

    2 жыл бұрын

    YESS it made me so angry. He was finally rounding out his thoughts there at the end and I couldn't hear what he said ugh.

  • @MJ-cl1dm
    @MJ-cl1dm3 жыл бұрын

    Apart from being a great intellectual he is also so sober, dignified and refined that makes him so endearing.

  • @fabiengerard8142

    @fabiengerard8142

    Жыл бұрын

    👌🏼

  • @HomeAtLast501

    @HomeAtLast501

    5 ай бұрын

    He's arrogant.

  • @rnv71950

    @rnv71950

    3 ай бұрын

    Absolutely void of arrogance

  • @Morganistalking
    @Morganistalking3 жыл бұрын

    as a young man myself, its odd to see Noam as a young man. bit like seeing a young santa.

  • @ujmm

    @ujmm

    3 жыл бұрын

    He was actually 44 here, but yeah., there aren't many videos of a younger Chomsky. Of known earlier material, there is the Buckley debate, Foucault debate, and Chomsky defending Daniel Ellsberg's actions at some program. Plus 2-3 other videos.

  • @christianjimenez1877
    @christianjimenez18775 жыл бұрын

    Magnífico Noam Chomsky. Excelente entrevista.

  • @gadflyeye
    @gadflyeye7 жыл бұрын

    When all names of currently living people will have perished into oblivion, when all living politicians, presidents, actors, entertainers, authors, athletes, entrepreneurs, musicians, poets,... of today (2016) will have been forgotten, centuries hence, one name will still be known and mentioned in textbooks (of linguistics, cognition, and computer science) and that name is "Noam Chomsky". And, by the way, videos such as this one are invaluable treasures for the future historians of science.

  • @1spiders1

    @1spiders1

    5 жыл бұрын

    Thomas McConville Dawkins is a idiot

  • @RookieN08

    @RookieN08

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@1spiders1 You can say whatever you want about his militant atheism movement but you can't deny his contribute towards evolutionary biology. He is the man who discovered meme which is one of the most important discovery in his field. No, I am not talking about internet meme but it is indeed derived from Dawkins' meme.

  • @ccmkoho

    @ccmkoho

    2 жыл бұрын

    🤮

  • @dewok2706

    @dewok2706

    Жыл бұрын

    Not really, you're just a fanboy. Ronaldo is going to be more remembered 100 years from now than this santa looking fuck

  • @helloitismetomato
    @helloitismetomato3 жыл бұрын

    When I started learning Japanese many years ago, it seemed so different from anything I knew (Dutch, English). Gradually as time went on I began to realize it really isn't. There's still nouns, verbs, subjects, direct and indirect objects, and so on. The differences that do exist just seem more and more trivial the more you learn. In Japanese, you conjugate adjectives (not all, though; I'm simplifying a bit) and in English you don't, but you can still say "the food was delicious" in both. I'm a total fake when it comes to knowing anything about linguistics or its neurophysiology, but the concept of languages being essentially the same makes perfect sense to me. In nature, diversity can flourish when there's no evolutionary pressure forcing something into a specific form. In language, I think this is why there are differences: the internal language system probably doesn't care if things are wired this way (conjugating adjectives to put them in past tense) or that way (using "was" to convey past tense); there's no difference in computational efficiency.

  • @makokx7063

    @makokx7063

    3 жыл бұрын

    The real difficult thing when learning another language isn't usually grammar, conjugation and such, it is usually when you are confronted with a concept that does not exist in your native language. For example, in Japanese there is the concept of topics vs subjects は・が we don't have that in English so this is often very difficult to get right for native English speakers. In English we have the concept of plurality. There is a cat vs there are cats. In Japanese they don't make a distinction so countable words give them some trouble.

  • @baronvonbeandip

    @baronvonbeandip

    2 жыл бұрын

    Huh? は is a subject statement, が indicates the thing being influenced by the verb (intransitive), を also indicates the object influenced by the verb (transitive). The difference between these is clear. For example 彼の娘は竹田さんの息子が指輪を渡した The daughter is the one who received the ring, Takeda's son is the one who gave it, the ring was the thing given, and giving was the thing done. You can omit the giver and still know a ring Takeda's daughter was given a ring. You can further omit the receiver and say a ring was given. Even further, for Japanese, you can omit everything and just say "gave" and you could parse everything from context.

  • @baronvonbeandip

    @baronvonbeandip

    2 жыл бұрын

    Also, OP, you are talking about Context Free Grammars. If you get a chance, Dr. Chomsky has a lecture on that. I think it's Yale OpenCourseware or The Great Courses. I don't remember which.

  • @deseanlothian

    @deseanlothian

    2 жыл бұрын

    funny enough i came here hoping to find inspiration on how to properly study japanese going further, as I've started plateuing in my progress.

  • @dovydenaspdx
    @dovydenaspdx Жыл бұрын

    So good! I loved him as a child for his politics, now as an adult for his linguistics. The best type of anarchist. A real humanist too.

  • @HomeAtLast501

    @HomeAtLast501

    5 ай бұрын

    True --- he really digs the humanist murder of innocent Palestinians.

  • @BraniG-psyc03

    @BraniG-psyc03

    3 ай бұрын

    😊😊😊

  • @michaelheliotis5279
    @michaelheliotis52793 жыл бұрын

    It feels really weird as a linguistics student to hear Chomsky having to talk about and defend his ideas as though they weren't fundamentally accepted in and largely elemental to our understanding of language today.

  • @CanaryAlien

    @CanaryAlien

    2 жыл бұрын

    Read Pullum, Brehme and Sampson (among others) Who show that there are lots of errors / lack of evidence for a lot of what Chomsky says.

  • @jahermos

    @jahermos

    2 жыл бұрын

    I’m guessing that’s because this is when he was just waging his revolution in linguistics. By the time you became a student, this is ancient history.

  • @luckyswine

    @luckyswine

    Жыл бұрын

    They arent. Generative grammar was largely dumped in the 2000s.

  • @michaelheliotis5279

    @michaelheliotis5279

    Жыл бұрын

    @@luckyswine Generative grammar is only something he added to, not pioneered, and it's a small part of his contribution to the field of linguistics. Regardless of the current veracity of his various linguistic ideas, he's not hailed as the "father of modern linguistics" because of any or all of those ideas, but rather because of his entire approach to the study of language, which was revolutionary at the time and is still influential in how the modern discipline is practised. Chomsky and his ideas aren't infallible, but the linguistics field wouldn't be what it is today without his vital input.

  • @davidguerra5237

    @davidguerra5237

    Жыл бұрын

    ... ok

  • @rasputindeltorro1826
    @rasputindeltorro1826 Жыл бұрын

    It is so fundamental what he is saying and I hope many linguists and language studiers take this point away from the interview: language learning is innate from childhood and not much more is added to that learning from attending school, but putting meaningless descriptions and titles to what your brain has already figured out. When learning another language people so often focus on studying as they did in school with what they learned and were taught about language, finding the nouns, verbs, predicates. But when we first learn a language we do not necessarily sort out the words and ideas in this way in our brain. It is counterintuitive to learn a second language in this way. Don’t do it! Immersion, repetition and I think music, are the best ways of learning a new language. You don’t even need to see a picture of the word to eventually learn what the word means… your brain has an amazing way of making these neural connections over time, just let it work.

  • @ZacharyMccormick
    @ZacharyMccormick6 жыл бұрын

    For a moment I thought that was Stephen Colbert.

  • @diskoeric2248

    @diskoeric2248

    4 жыл бұрын

    no you didn't

  • @knowledgeapplication3387

    @knowledgeapplication3387

    3 жыл бұрын

    I also

  • @ToddWrightthedrummer

    @ToddWrightthedrummer

    2 жыл бұрын

    Woodie Allen.

  • @adambird-ridnell6415
    @adambird-ridnell64157 жыл бұрын

    Genius

  • @LawrenceCarroll1234
    @LawrenceCarroll12347 жыл бұрын

    This is excellent. I wonder though, is there a video of Chomsky (but not too technical, but like this one) where Jean Piaget is mentioned and expounded upon some. He was the genius who pointed out that when parents point to a thing -- say a cat 🐱-- and say "cat" to their baby to instruct him, that the child 👶 already understands that the finger (or hand, arm etc.) is NOT the "cat". Therefore, say-ith Piaget, there are "innate structures" in the mind. This is an ingenious refutation of David Hume's belief that the mind is a "blank slate" or tabula rasa. It also brings up Plato's "forms."

  • @bilalali3208

    @bilalali3208

    6 жыл бұрын

    tabula rasa was an idea by john locke, not hume

  • @saumitrsharma2816

    @saumitrsharma2816

    6 жыл бұрын

    Bilal Ali Nope, it was given by Aristotle.

  • @gssoorya

    @gssoorya

    4 жыл бұрын

    Also of Jung

  • @connorbyers1872

    @connorbyers1872

    4 жыл бұрын

    He's a genius. He more or less established the field of developmental psychology.

  • @TheRaveJunkie

    @TheRaveJunkie

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@mortengreaves1 thanks a lot!

  • @EZ-ELIMZ.
    @EZ-ELIMZ.4 жыл бұрын

    I can listen to him all day...

  • @johnstockwellmajorsmedleyb1214
    @johnstockwellmajorsmedleyb12147 жыл бұрын

    A great intellectual, one of the great Anarchists of modern times. With an arrest record to boot.

  • @gwen6622

    @gwen6622

    6 жыл бұрын

    fuck yeah linguistics and anarchy dude

  • @govegan6682

    @govegan6682

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@gwen6622 a cooler human being has never walked the earth. Chomsky will never die.

  • @alphablitz1024

    @alphablitz1024

    3 жыл бұрын

    He has literally defended every Communist (and some non-Communist) genocide of the 20th century. A true radical.

  • @emmanueloluga9770

    @emmanueloluga9770

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@alphablitz1024 Meh, I know what you tried to do there and I understand. However, I see Chomsky as a dialectic. Take the facts he provides with the utmost precedence and reverence, but take his opinions and ideologies at face value lol. He is human after all.

  • @johnstockwellmajorsmedleyb1214

    @johnstockwellmajorsmedleyb1214

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@emmanueloluga9770 Thats for sure. He is a "Former" Zionist Gate Keeper. His lack of solutions always makes me a bit skeptical.

  • @podimala
    @podimala2 жыл бұрын

    I could just listen to him for hours...

  • @SangiovanniOmar
    @SangiovanniOmar5 жыл бұрын

    Innovative creative character of it. Sounds like art

  • @medievalmusiclover
    @medievalmusiclover4 жыл бұрын

    Noan is just a GENIUS. Thanks GOD for such gife for us to learn from him!

  • @Leonidas.Vergos
    @Leonidas.Vergos6 жыл бұрын

    Is this the best video on the Internet?

  • @nomad9338
    @nomad93383 жыл бұрын

    Fascinating.

  • @chapachuu
    @chapachuu3 жыл бұрын

    Science rarely ages well, but that’s the nice thing about it. We now know language is not just one side of the brain and that humans aren’t the only animals that use lateralization.

  • @doubllechief7034
    @doubllechief70345 жыл бұрын

    Chomsky is a national treasure

  • @EvgeniyNeutralMusician

    @EvgeniyNeutralMusician

    4 жыл бұрын

    Nations have nothing to do with it.

  • @qreddie

    @qreddie

    2 жыл бұрын

    International treasure*

  • @JilaniSMGolam

    @JilaniSMGolam

    2 жыл бұрын

    Global intellectual.

  • @9ela
    @9ela3 жыл бұрын

    Great mind!

  • @adamsasso1
    @adamsasso15 жыл бұрын

    I bet he had fun with Lea Thompson at the “Enchantment Under the Sea” dance

  • @keithklassen5320

    @keithklassen5320

    4 жыл бұрын

    What, Loraine? What?

  • @homerco213
    @homerco2136 жыл бұрын

    Language is a finite integral phenomena that is in practical use infinite. That sound about right?

  • @uttaradit2
    @uttaradit24 жыл бұрын

    the usual chomskian brilliance

  • @bramvandenheuvel4049
    @bramvandenheuvel40497 жыл бұрын

    Edit: Slava Ukraina!

  • @BollocksUtwat

    @BollocksUtwat

    7 жыл бұрын

    I think really people who get disappointed when a speaker isn't trying to persuade them with emotion and charisma have been taught not to consider content but appearance and then will when confronted with this bizarre complaint fall back on suggesting that _this is just how people are_ and you need to be persuasive to be effective, ie. if you're not trying to manipulate people then you're a loser in the market of ideas. Seems like a very predatory attitude.

  • @beautymyreligion

    @beautymyreligion

    7 жыл бұрын

    In Europe, pretty much everyone speaks like that :)

  • @RATDATSUN

    @RATDATSUN

    7 жыл бұрын

    he expresses himself well dunit he

  • @tcjusttc5418

    @tcjusttc5418

    7 жыл бұрын

    his intelligence without bias is a thing of beauty.

  • @snackspositive

    @snackspositive

    7 жыл бұрын

    No, that's impossible. He says things that are 1 well researched 2 persuasive and 3 confirm your biases.

  • @claudemontes
    @claudemontes5 жыл бұрын

    Our Most difficult college course was Cognitive psychology, using a textbook written by Chomsky in the 1980S. Why was this class so difficult that all the students failed the first test?

  • @chandler1473

    @chandler1473

    4 жыл бұрын

    Haha maybe because Noam is a bit of a pedant lol. Gotta love him though

  • @jemandoondame2581

    @jemandoondame2581

    3 жыл бұрын

    Do you have the ISBN?

  • @claudemontes

    @claudemontes

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@jemandoondame2581 no ISBN , I'll need to search in 1987 . Did not keep the book after semester's end. Even the new professor had a difficult time.

  • @HkFinn83

    @HkFinn83

    Жыл бұрын

    It’s a very technical field. If you’re doing a general linguistics course it could be a little surprising.

  • @youtoobfarmer

    @youtoobfarmer

    5 ай бұрын

    Chomsky hasn't written any textbooks as such. Maybe the book was "Knowledge of Language", which was written for a more general audience than his technical writing of the 80s, like "Lectures in Government and Binding" and "Barriers", for example.

  • @michaelwjonesGolf30
    @michaelwjonesGolf30 Жыл бұрын

    Can I use this video in one of my videos? Awesome work.

  • @khalidbinwalid1566
    @khalidbinwalid15665 жыл бұрын

    Apparently I’m not the only one who loves Chomsky.

  • @chita4114
    @chita41146 жыл бұрын

    Curious about his current take on the matter with the advent of google translate and related translation software.

  • @jackspicerisland
    @jackspicerisland4 жыл бұрын

    Damn, what a brain ❤️

  • @user-tl6iu3ee3f
    @user-tl6iu3ee3fАй бұрын

    the language started with the voice, and we started to know this voice and came words and words came sentences with the right structure subject verbes complete and to spoken language with specific environment with specific linguistic this how the strated if strated with hearing this language all the human kind leroning like this way frome hearing.

  • @thestarsky9996
    @thestarsky99965 жыл бұрын

    Well....he was a good looking young man and still decent looking man.

  • @hirotakakawano7212
    @hirotakakawano72122 жыл бұрын

    Language, of course, has not only communication and expression of ideas, but a creative function such as「 דבר 」 in Hebrew .

  • @mchammer3432
    @mchammer34324 жыл бұрын

    Young Chomsky still as bad ass as older even more experienced Chomsky

  • @christinescarff4920
    @christinescarff4920 Жыл бұрын

    Remember this from my studies in psychology - all children are born with language in their head , and there’s a difference between syntax and semantics . A sentence can be syntactically correct but semantically meaningless - as in the famous ‘ colourless green ideas ‘ etc quotation.

  • @mcesavage
    @mcesavage5 жыл бұрын

    Noam Chomsky so smart bro

  • @veryliberalprogressiveathe6117
    @veryliberalprogressiveathe61176 жыл бұрын

    I love Naom Chomsky, he's so intelligent 🤓

  • @Toto8opus

    @Toto8opus

    5 жыл бұрын

    Who doesn't? N.B.: It's "Noam".

  • @LotusReal
    @LotusReal25 күн бұрын

    Wow what a wonderful and insightful language and linguistics professor I wonder what he thinks about American Presidents.

  • @benefactor4309
    @benefactor43092 ай бұрын

    He is so handsome

  • @LakshmiiSharma
    @LakshmiiSharma7 ай бұрын

    If language is just training anybody can learn,fact that some people can't learn even after so much training,there is something more to it

  • @user-jj8jw5kp9x
    @user-jj8jw5kp9x Жыл бұрын

    What no one has been able to explain so far is how reality becomes knowledge and language. When and how children learn to speak is not related to the written and audio genesis of language. I do not see why Mr. N. Chomsky is considered a great linguist since he did not tell us the way sensory information passes into the field of cognition and language. The issue that all languages have a similar structure, i.e. they have subject, verb, object, etc., what Mr. Chomsky called universals was first noticed by Spinoza, when he said that '' ordo et connexio idearum idem est ac ordo et connexio rerum '' i.e. '' The order and connection of the thought is identical to with the order and connection of the things.'' For language, what no one explained, is from where the letters of the alphabet came about as shapes and sounds and how they are collectively connected to what they mean. Can Mr. Chomsky or anyone else explain these? Whoever finds the explanation will be the greatest of all linguists.

  • @sara.1377
    @sara.13774 жыл бұрын

    is there a written transcript of this video?

  • @OneFurlongTooLong
    @OneFurlongTooLong2 жыл бұрын

    This interviewer was the podcast host version of a pre-podcast era. So ahead of his time with his level of unnecessary interruption!

  • @wagnerraymondreyesalvarez5570
    @wagnerraymondreyesalvarez55705 ай бұрын

  • @Fabian-qb3yv
    @Fabian-qb3yv5 жыл бұрын

    does anybody know from what year this interview is?

  • @vero14467

    @vero14467

    4 жыл бұрын

    It must have been in the 70s because he is very old now

  • @swim3936
    @swim39364 жыл бұрын

    Just I case anybody else was wondering: the notion that only humans exhibit brain asymmetry has been refuted. It was common wisdom then, but now we know that animals show handedness for example. That’s what it seems like after 5 minutes of googling anyway.

  • @stevenhines5550

    @stevenhines5550

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yeah. This was sixty years ago.

  • @maratibragimov3726
    @maratibragimov3726 Жыл бұрын

    Exodus 4: 10-11 And Moses said unto the LORD, O my Lord, I [am] not eloquent, neither heretofore, nor since thou hast spoken unto thy servant: but I [am] slow of speech, and of a slow tongue. {4:11} And the LORD said unto him, Who hath made man’s mouth? or who maketh the dumb, or deaf, or the seeing, or the blind? have not I the LORD?

  • @user-tl6iu3ee3f
    @user-tl6iu3ee3f29 күн бұрын

    the structure of language started with the human kind when they are baby in the belly of three mother they are very smart and the listening to our words strated with voice to words to sentences to order language subject verbes complete order structure with order sentence of course to praghraphes to texts to document to book of course.

  • @brinx8634
    @brinx86347 жыл бұрын

    Chomsky looks great! Has he had some work done? Facelift? I know his hair is colored but it looks great.

  • @anouman9883

    @anouman9883

    7 жыл бұрын

    This was filmed in the 1970s.

  • @brinx8634

    @brinx8634

    7 жыл бұрын

    OK, good to know! Are you literally sure though? I've seen photographs where he looked like this. And this was uploaded just a month ago.

  • @anouman9883

    @anouman9883

    7 жыл бұрын

    Brinx Yeah, this was taken from a half-hour interview filmed sometime in the mid-1970s for a show called "Day at Night"-you can find the full show here on KZread. As far as the photographs go, it's possible that you saw some from the late 70s or 80s, where he still looked a lot like he does here. Nowadays he's noticeably older, but still looks quite good for his age and quite healthy.

  • @dayph

    @dayph

    7 жыл бұрын

    Thanks man! I'd probably had a hard time finding the full interview without your comment.

  • @anouman9883

    @anouman9883

    7 жыл бұрын

    No problem, my friend, glad I could help! :)

  • @carolwan7537
    @carolwan75373 жыл бұрын

    Chomsky is DAboom

  • @h3um
    @h3um5 жыл бұрын

    Anyone whos when this interview was recorded?

  • @Toto8opus

    @Toto8opus

    5 жыл бұрын

    Right after the last Pterodactylus got extinct.

  • @mathman2170
    @mathman21703 жыл бұрын

    Recommended title: "An Idiot Interviews one of the Greatest Minds of our Time."

  • @MJ-cl1dm

    @MJ-cl1dm

    3 жыл бұрын

    Perhaps you could have done a better job. One simply gets reduced in front of a greater mind.

  • @marcweeks9178
    @marcweeks91783 жыл бұрын

    Bryan Magee did a much, much better job of interviewing Professor Chomsky (video available on KZread), mainly because Magee was practically a philosopher himself and took the time to educate himself on the subject before speaking with Chomsky. Chomsky didn't get that large a Wikipedia entry by just winging it, and it will someday be said, upon occasion of his death, that "It was like a continent had slid into the sea" (with credit to Brad Darrach, who wrote that line about Sir Laurence Olivier's passing).

  • @edwardmurdoch5070

    @edwardmurdoch5070

    2 жыл бұрын

    Bryan Magee also made wonderful introductions to the subject matters covered in his program or the thinker he was about to interview. I love those videos!

  • @Maya79800
    @Maya798002 жыл бұрын

    He got a sexy Mind , so attraktiv ….. saure much much More

  • @wtrbrns
    @wtrbrns3 жыл бұрын

    Unrelated, he was hot af

  • @naranjolopezdaviddaniel7529

    @naranjolopezdaviddaniel7529

    3 жыл бұрын

    He looks handsome, right? A handsome nerd.

  • @user-tl6iu3ee3f
    @user-tl6iu3ee3f2 ай бұрын

    the brain can leroning a lot of languages, with konw with the miracle of Allah the listening it the ear the système of this wonderful sense we like musulm we leroning this formbooks Qauran the book of all sceince it meanche that: ::::::إن خلقنا الإنسان من نطفة أمشاج نبتليه فجعلناه سميع بصير: :::::::::::::.the vers meaning that Allah created us forme won cell give us outher celles this miracle of Allah and meaning Allah give us the sense of ear and sense of seen here in this vers Allah make the the sense of hearing before seeing and structure of languages starte forme brain and ear it so close .and I want to told that professor I just listening and your speech inspire me like linguistique and want just listening to legend in linguistique and philosophie it honour to sceince with all the respect Professor peace be upon us .

  • @user-tl6iu3ee3f
    @user-tl6iu3ee3fАй бұрын

    The structure of sentences changes with the level of language's fro example we have level of the literary here we the complex sentences: she the most and the great intelligent woman she like the peral of the sea. the level of school the level :the simple sentence with simple words in dictionnaire we found this level in school fro example : she say goodbye. the level of family: say :good :no structure of sentences.

  • @coreycox2345
    @coreycox23456 жыл бұрын

    I wonder if studying data on KZread (which must be the most significant repository of human language to ever exist) has revealed anything new about language?

  • @mattthelearner2797

    @mattthelearner2797

    3 жыл бұрын

    Never thought of KZread in that light, crazy to think that.

  • @grahamh.4230

    @grahamh.4230

    9 ай бұрын

    I'd say the most significant repository of data is probably texts on iMessage or maybe emails, although those aren't all publicly available. In the past two decades, there has been a lot of research on internet language, including its unique features and the ways it can show the development of languages over time, but I don't know how much there's been related to KZread or to video content/comments.

  • @jodeethowwow6907
    @jodeethowwow69076 жыл бұрын

    If a child were to be raised in an enviornment in which everyone had a lisp, would said child acquire the lisp also?

  • @gerrydonohoe3931

    @gerrydonohoe3931

    6 жыл бұрын

    Yes, but that's not language, it's just one of many possible sounds we can make. E.g. the Spanish 'lisp' is learned and spoken in certain regions.

  • @edwardmurdoch5070

    @edwardmurdoch5070

    6 жыл бұрын

    To expand on Gerry's response. Language is not only about communication. That is just a minimal part of it. I do not remember exactly, but it represents only between 3% to 5% of the total usage. When you are thinking, you are using language. That is how we codify thought. So, pretty much if you are awake or dreaming...you are using language.

  • @gerrydonohoe3931

    @gerrydonohoe3931

    6 жыл бұрын

    Yes, when you include thinking (which doesn't require agreed-upon rules), things get really creative. unfortunately, most people think negatively, and conversations in our heads tend to be about problems.

  • @freeyourselfmorowa9243

    @freeyourselfmorowa9243

    5 жыл бұрын

    If that was the case then where do children who were raised in an environment in which no one has a lisp acquire their lisp from?

  • @jimmechanikong6924

    @jimmechanikong6924

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@freeyourselfmorowa9243 Due to cognitive and/or physical abnormality that make it difficult or impossible for them to not produce the lisp when speaking.

  • @MB-id1uh
    @MB-id1uh3 жыл бұрын

    What year was this ?

  • @demetriosk3650
    @demetriosk36507 жыл бұрын

    Does anyone know who the interviewer is? Thanks.

  • @marcusgorvin175

    @marcusgorvin175

    7 жыл бұрын

    Maurice fisher?

  • @owlcowl

    @owlcowl

    7 жыл бұрын

    James Day on his interview show of 1973-74. The full episode is available on YT.

  • @Toto8opus

    @Toto8opus

    5 жыл бұрын

    One of the many who crossed path with Noam the time of a brief conversation and got forgotten for ever right after it.

  • @Randall2023
    @Randall20234 жыл бұрын

    Professor Noam Chomsky professor Rarihokwats

  • @emagodoy2227
    @emagodoy2227 Жыл бұрын

    does someone know the precise date of this piece?

  • @user-jj8jw5kp9x
    @user-jj8jw5kp9x Жыл бұрын

    Αυτό που ποτέ ο κύριος Τσιόμσκι δεν εξηγεί είναι την σχέση της πραγματικότητας με τη γλώσσα δηλαδή πώς αυτά που γράφουμε και λέμε σχετίζονται με όσα καταλαβαίνουμε.

  • @Ben-bg2lp
    @Ben-bg2lp2 жыл бұрын

    This guy coughs I learn a new thing!

  • @jasonwitt7943
    @jasonwitt79434 жыл бұрын

    This interviewer was so far in over his head. Total klutz, and arguably rude

  • @Young.Supernovas

    @Young.Supernovas

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, it's clear he wasn't convinced. Chomsky didn't care either. Most people are too egotistical not to care, but Chomsky is satisfied in the knowledge that he's right -- he doesn't care if the YOU know he's right or not

  • @13_all77

    @13_all77

    3 жыл бұрын

    i feel like the interviewer was playing the devil's advocate, in that, he wanted cover any potential misinterpretation

  • @Primitarian
    @Primitarian3 жыл бұрын

    How astonished the interviewer seems to be at idea that there may actually be something more to a person's mind, language included, than conditioning! It's as if it's just an established fact that a human being is nothing more than a trained ape. Our culture has certainly drunk deep at the well of "science," or at least a certain popular impression of it as being the same as omniscience. That having been said, I think it might have proven difficult for Prof Chomsky to identify what exactly humanity has in terms of unconscious thought. On the one hand, he may be right, there ought to be some linquistic faculty that is distinctive in its effects and held in commond by all human being because all of us have the same brain generally. But on the other hand, what seems to me to make the human brain distinctive is its capacity to be creative and thus to defy to defy formulation. Ultimately then his hypothesis, though I believe it to be true, seems to me likely to be unprovable.

  • @happycakes1946
    @happycakes19465 ай бұрын

    How is immersing a child in situation where language is spoken different from training? If a child were never spoken to it would never learn language - it's no different than someone who has never seen a computer before learning to use a computer by being "immersed" in a situation where computers are being used around them. It seems training is being substituted for learning which people can do on their own. The easiest way to learn is monkey-see-monkey-do. By using something repetitively people develop a deeper understanding of the thing itself.

  • @jahermos
    @jahermos2 жыл бұрын

    What date is this?

  • @taciturnip
    @taciturnip5 жыл бұрын

    What year did this happen?

  • @davidcerar4437

    @davidcerar4437

    3 жыл бұрын

    1973/4

  • @jrrtt25
    @jrrtt255 жыл бұрын

    When was this interview? How old is Chomsky here?

  • @ziadfatnassi851

    @ziadfatnassi851

    5 жыл бұрын

    The interview was taken in the 1970's. Chomsky was then in his late forties or early fifties. Now he is a lot older, but he looks healthier for his age. He was a famous linguist and was the first linguist in his field to have talked about this biological property to acquire language among all children regarsless of their origin. This language exception was called Universal Grammar. Now, Chomsky doesn't talk about linguistics as much as public affairs. I really like how he exposes the lies of mainstream media and how they manipulate the public, and also exposing these cheap 'intellectuals' who have justified, in the course of events, the intervention of the US in Latin America, Asia and the Middle East. He has also exposed why the US supports Israel and his sympathy for the Paletinians (see his videos fir that matter). Hundreds of thousands of innocent people have been massacred in the name of US 'policemanship' of the world. Those intellectuals have often systematically supported unconscientiously such horrible interventions. Chomsky is an exception of such very few free honest and rational intellectuals who have been consistent in their support of any just cause.

  • @poiewhfopiewhf

    @poiewhfopiewhf

    4 жыл бұрын

    6

  • @fratferocious80

    @fratferocious80

    4 жыл бұрын

    Ziad Fatnassi Voaw

  • @enabrant8982
    @enabrant89824 жыл бұрын

    I would hope that, before he dies, Prof Chomsky would share his thoughts on "who" created our species (homo sapiens).

  • @keithklassen5320

    @keithklassen5320

    4 жыл бұрын

    I think that he would do a fine job of not audibly laughing at the question. He is a very polite person.

  • @michelangelou7
    @michelangelou77 жыл бұрын

    ..my thoughts, Intentions are biological and noticeable on a conscious and subconscious level. To speak to, you must first have the intent of communication. Language is a learned reinforcement a majority of the time. When someone is not saying what they mean, that's noticeable, not just in the language but the biological functions, energy, intention or what have you.

  • @pramitbanerjee

    @pramitbanerjee

    7 жыл бұрын

    not true, you can be unconscious or not even thinking when you are speaking. The intention is just an illusion, produced as an afterthought after the response is already generated.

  • @michelangelou7

    @michelangelou7

    7 жыл бұрын

    Most people can tell what a person is going to say before they say it through focusing attention. Intention is no illusion but the true manner of intended reaction, you can not hide energy easily buy you can disguise it with language. If everyone could read each other intentions language wouldn't be as useful as it is today. Verbal communication was probably developed and used as the last resort. Until we got smarter as a species and we were able to name more things and it became more useful and complicated.

  • @JPizzle1490

    @JPizzle1490

    7 жыл бұрын

    "To speak to, you must first have the intent of communication. Language is a learned reinforcement most of the time." The statement seems to suggest that language is inseparable from communication. Although he doesn't talk about it in this interview, one of Chomsky's important assertions is, to the contrary, that the communicative properties of language are simply a bi-product. Language is first an internal system of thought.

  • @NoOne-uz4vs
    @NoOne-uz4vs4 жыл бұрын

    He reminds me of Matthew Mcconaughey. The "whistle" when he talks lol

  • @ethanstump

    @ethanstump

    4 жыл бұрын

    damn, if you don't look at him, just listen to him, he sounds like a smarter, less emotive Matthew mcconaughy. damn.

  • @brianearner5092
    @brianearner50924 жыл бұрын

    40 million people in California, 2 Senate ,half a million in any dakotas same . Democracy?😁

  • @biologykipathshala7738
    @biologykipathshala77385 жыл бұрын

    Who is founder of structural Grammar?

  • @fratferocious80

    @fratferocious80

    4 жыл бұрын

    Ferdinand De seassure

  • @aldi9802
    @aldi98022 жыл бұрын

    "Nobody knows about the neurology of learning." Hmm does this interview predate the work of Eric Kandel?

  • @TTuoTT
    @TTuoTT7 жыл бұрын

    Interviewer spitting out superficial commonplaces in the first 50 seks

  • @keithklassen5320

    @keithklassen5320

    4 жыл бұрын

    Trying to create context for his viewers, I'd say. Most of us viewing this interview are familiar with Chomsky's ideas in a way that was almost impossible at the time, certainly not as widespread as now.

  • @javiermartinez-ortiz6891
    @javiermartinez-ortiz68913 жыл бұрын

    Professor Plum

  • @noahsimontov

    @noahsimontov

    3 жыл бұрын

    LMAOOOO

  • @ericak5624
    @ericak56243 жыл бұрын

    The interviewer needs to learn interviewing skills

  • @shatchett0
    @shatchett03 жыл бұрын

    Now if they could only teach this guy to speak English.

  • @vangoventures6513
    @vangoventures65136 жыл бұрын

    Anybody else hearing a sibilant S coming from Chomsky?

  • @jrrtt25

    @jrrtt25

    5 жыл бұрын

    Van Go Ventures yes he’s done this literally his whole life-right on into today. Crushes that ‘s’. lol

  • @steakfilly5199
    @steakfilly5199 Жыл бұрын

    Noam Chomsky when somebody mention Pirahã: 😡😡😡😡

  • @tlatolcalli682
    @tlatolcalli682 Жыл бұрын

    Damn. Not, gonna, lie. Chomsky's pretty good! Too bad he went red ::::c

  • @logangustavson
    @logangustavson3 жыл бұрын

    Me and my best friend Austin Martin are watching this and we see best friends FYI BUT. We do not ck concur with the hypothesis of a culturally determined walk. The very idea is sickening to man.

  • @HomeAtLast501
    @HomeAtLast5015 ай бұрын

    Based upon what he said, feral children should have developed their own languages. They haven't. So languages are taught/learned. So even though the biological structure exists, they still must be learned. I have learned over time that Noam has a deep need to be contrarian on every fricking issue he discusses so that he can feel he is correct and smarter than everyone else.

  • @Ravstar999
    @Ravstar9997 жыл бұрын

    Is it not possible that the incredibly linguistic creativity that children have is just a byproduct of their extremely plastic brains and prolonged exposure to language. Young children who have a lot of exposure to the piano are perfectly capable of creating a unique tune, this doesn't necessarily mean there's a preprogrammed musical part of the brain does it? How is language different aside from the fact that it's basic components are words instead of musical notes. Once we build up our knowledge of the components of a certain field of study, e.g. for language words, and have those components allocated to a certain part of our brain, creative use of those components involves the brain continuously working different connections between these components. Children's brains are very plastic so a child can make these connections far quicker than an adult provided they both have the same experience of the subject matter. In language's case adults are more articulate than children, but only because they have far more experience. A child can learn a new language far quicker than an adult can.

  • @edwardmurdoch5070

    @edwardmurdoch5070

    6 жыл бұрын

    It is an interesting question. Music is rearranged sounds in a mathematical structure. We do not do the counting of the sequences consciously but it seems to me such structuring is what gets our attention; so it has some form of "syntax". As far as meaning goes (semantics), maybe is a special kind of language in which each person confers its own meaning to the words (notes). Maybe music is related to language. In defense of the Universal Language proposed by Chomsky, how do you account for the fact that as early in life as late stages of fetuses respond reflexibly to language distinguishing it from noise? And how do you account for blind children who can not pick on physical language (gestures, clues) to distinguish it from noises, for the very first time in their life, to begin learning? That suggest our mind is not a blank cloth...there must be a grammatical structure already in us. It is a fascinating subject.

  • @jbartnik1918

    @jbartnik1918

    5 жыл бұрын

    You are actually pretty close to Chomsky's argument! What Chomsky is primarily arguing against here is the idea that language is something that needs to be *taught* and *explained*. The best analogy to the then-conventional wisdom is to mathematics. You may eventually gain an intuitive understanding of quantities, but even counting past three needs to be taught (three because there exist languages in hunter-gatherer societies where there are three numbers--one, two, and more than that). Higher functions in mathematics need to be patiently explained, practiced, and corrected. Up till Chomsky, western social science (and grammar school practice) assumed the same of language--people would not only speak "incorrectly," but *wouldn't even understand language* unless it were explained, practiced, and corrected. Your piano analogy is also very apt: Cognitive linguists discovered that musicians experience music as language. Your average human hears primarily language in the right ear (left brain), and other sounds, including music, in the left ear (right brain). Experienced musicians however hear both music and language from the right ear, and the same parts of the brain are activated when hearing either. So it is analogous to language for some people. But I think it is also worthwhile to note that even banging on a piano is itself already a highly structured musical experience--there are 88 keys, and therefore 88 notes, that can be played. In that way, it's also like a language, in which the rules vary (not all musical traditions have the notes that western music does), but each one is a coherent system that allows for both innovation and games. (I'm also unaware of any culture that doesn't have music--it's pretty much a human universal, like language, unlike for example, math, or architecture) EDITED to add: I think the primary difference between language and other behaviors like music, is that by the time a child reaches five to seven years of age, they have perfectly mastered their mother tongue (sometimes multiple, depending on which languages the people they interact with the most speak). Many children are exposed to music from a very young age, but only true prodigies demonstrate true mastery.

  • @davidcerar4437

    @davidcerar4437

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@jbartnik1918 Well put; apart from the last section, where I can't see the difference between language and music. I think you might have overlooked that many kids are exposed to language and language CREATION, while on the other hand many kids might be exposed to music, but definetly not to CREATING music. Couldn't you say you have (we have) different standards on what MASTERY is, in case of language and music?

  • @CanaryAlien

    @CanaryAlien

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jbartnik1918 five year olds have certainly not perfectly mastered their language. They would not understand much of the vocabalary in a high school textbook, let alone something complicated. Children don't write books, articles, poetry or anything really beyond very basic things. Far from masters of a language.

  • @luckyswine

    @luckyswine

    Жыл бұрын

    This is largely the current view.

  • @gwen6622
    @gwen66226 жыл бұрын

    man the interviewer really doesnt get it lmao chomsky's explaining some incredibly basic shit here lmao. granted, he's being really longwinded about it, but what he's saying just boils down to "anyone can learn any language from birth, so the capacity to learn capital-l Language must be innate"

  • @kenbar4761

    @kenbar4761

    6 жыл бұрын

    Why do you keep lyao?

  • @FangedLion

    @FangedLion

    4 жыл бұрын

    “Anyone can learn any language from birth” is not his reasoning. If it was, that would be non sequitr. It does not necessarily follow that any human being able to adopt any language that language learning is innate in humans. The behaviorist would just say that any human can learn any language because we train them based on the environment that the human lives in (ie with other language speaking humans). Chomsky focuses more on the special niche things that humans are able to do despite never being trained in them (such as identifying a face despite it being turned).

  • @vertigoz
    @vertigoz7 жыл бұрын

    It never ceases to amaze me just how Trump supporters can share an ancestry with Noam Chomsky's.

  • @vinm300

    @vinm300

    5 жыл бұрын

    IF by 'boot strap loader' you mean an arrangement of cells in the cortex then yes.

  • @johnsmith92704

    @johnsmith92704

    5 жыл бұрын

    I think Noam himself would find this a cheap and condescending comment

  • @davidjones500
    @davidjones5007 жыл бұрын

    yo yo yo. i don't need no grammar, fool. you still get me though, innit.

  • @gwen6622

    @gwen6622

    6 жыл бұрын

    actually that sentence has a ton of grammar in it

  • @kelly980

    @kelly980

    5 жыл бұрын

    Chomsky talks about how it is an observable part of human creativity across cultures to develop language in different directions, with slang, special codes, etc.

  • @jesussanchezherrero5659
    @jesussanchezherrero56593 жыл бұрын

    What about foreign language learners? They're trained and need school to learn the basic Grammar. Input alone would be far too chaotic 🤔

  • @briancamus8131

    @briancamus8131

    3 жыл бұрын

    Not true. There is a French language series called Assimil that is based entirely on what researchers in second-language acquisition call comprehensible input or CI. And in recent years, the work of a particular SLA researcher named Stephen Krashen has become very popular in many language pedagogy circles.

  • @jesussanchezherrero5659

    @jesussanchezherrero5659

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@briancamus8131 thx! I'm actually learning French so you made my day! If u know any other plz name it here

  • @makokx7063
    @makokx70635 жыл бұрын

    Sounds smart but I don't see how it's different from literally anything else that we learn? We do LEARN language. We hear it, mimic it and slowly impart meanings to those sounds. We pick up things like grammar simply through repetition and inference. You only have to be told "no, you already ATE" to learn about the past tense. However if a human was to grow up on their own, they will become able to walk but it's unlikely they'd develop their own language. Language may be special but why is it any different than playing a piano or drawing a picture? Things that can be learned and mastered through mimicry alone with no direct training or teaching?

  • @HCadrenaline

    @HCadrenaline

    5 жыл бұрын

    I think you are proposing the idea of 'motheries' with the traditional skinner behavioural psychology approach that Chomsky originally opposed before the Cognitive revolution. First of all, we have to explain why children learn syntax and vocabulary so fast? This is refereed to as the poverty of the stimulus in formal linguistics and is still somewhat of a mystery to linguistics/psychologists. Before learning that structure of the irregular past tense, a child may say 'I eated' because the child is unconsciously applying innate grammatical structures to form the past tense, however we are taught this to be wrong by society. Similarly, we may consciously say /dove/ into the pool instead of /dived/ because we are confusing it with drive/drove and we are experiencing interference and a desire to say the right tense so we don't appear stupid, as a result, both forms are now perceived as correct ways of forming the past tense. Neuroscience has shown how irregular forms of past tense verbs /ate/ uses a part of the brain related to memory, and words that we naturally apply to form past tenses of verbs are related to another area of the brain, perhaps the part known for forming morphological differences in words. We also have to consider the infinite use of finite means that Chomsky proposes. We won't have all this room in our minds to hold every possible variation of a sentence and ability to process sentences said by others, so we use innate structures in our minds to form an infinite possible of ways of expressing and processing a sentence, emotion, phrase, etc

  • @fratferocious80

    @fratferocious80

    4 жыл бұрын

    Jon That is a nice explanation.

  • @CanaryAlien

    @CanaryAlien

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@HCadrenaline why do you think It is 'so' fast the way children learn language? People continue to learn vocabulary and grammatical structures their whole life. What is the poverty of stimulous? Babies, toddlers and young children are exposed to probably millions of words. Why is that a poverty of stimulous?

  • @dnaann1867
    @dnaann18672 жыл бұрын

    Broca's area in the frontal lobe of the dominant hemisphere,responsible for language declines steeply after 5 years. Another hero lost to the super adventure club.

  • @anastasiadayot4511
    @anastasiadayot45113 жыл бұрын

    Wrong. Meet sophie the a.i

  • @georgebennett5849

    @georgebennett5849

    3 жыл бұрын

    What's wrong?

  • @EvgeniyNeutralMusician
    @EvgeniyNeutralMusician4 жыл бұрын

    Noam was wrong about repetitions. Everything is intertext, there are reminiscent things and repetitions everywhere.

  • @fratferocious80
    @fratferocious804 жыл бұрын

    Repetitions

  • @noviprospekt7386
    @noviprospekt73862 жыл бұрын

    What kind of politics is this?

  • @maratibragimov3726
    @maratibragimov3726 Жыл бұрын

    I am sorry, Mr Chomsky, but language is not biologically determined.