Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science, 2007, Volume 252, PART 2, 177-192, DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4020-5581-2_13

BIOLOGICAL NOTIONS OF INNATENESS AND EXPLANATION OF LANGUAGE ACQUISITION

MIKA KIIKERI and TOMI KOKKONEN

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Abstract

All children learn or acquire their first language during a relatively short period in childhood. Individual variation or differences in learning environments seem to have very little influence on this process. Basically, every human being acquires a native language in essentially the same way. These facts have long puzzled linguists and psychologists. Generally speakin, there have been two competing accounts of this phenomenon, the empiricist’s story and the nativist’s story.

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