237196

(2003) Synthese 136 (2).

Cowie on the poverty of stimulus

John Collins

pp. 159-190

My paper defends the use of the poverty of stimulus argument (POSA) for linguistic nativism against Cowie's (1999) counter-claim that it leaves empiricism untouched. I first present the linguistic POSA as arising from a reflection on the generality of the child's initial state in comparison with the specific complexity of its final state. I then show that Cowie misconstrues the POSA as a direct argument about the character of the pld. In this light, I first argue that the data Cowie marshals about the pld does not begin to suggest that the POSA is unsound. Second, through a discussion of the so-called `auxiliary inversion rule', I show, by way of diagnosis, that Cowie misunderstands both the methodology of current linguistics and the complexity of the data it is obliged to explain.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1023/A:1024738522031

Full citation:

Collins, J. (2003). Cowie on the poverty of stimulus. Synthese 136 (2), pp. 159-190.

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