The author opens with a discussion of the differences between animal and human communication and the biological foundations of language. He looks at the physiological preconditions for language evolution and the early evolution of meaning and communication. He then embarks on an important and original account of the natural history of conversation. Here he considers the roles of language in supporting social cohesion and information exchange.
This challenging and original account will appeal to all those interested in the origins of language and the evolution of human behaviour.
Table of Contents
Part I The Place of Language in Human Evolutionary History
1. Animal and Human Communication
2. Culture, Languages, and Language
3. The Biological Roots of Language
4. Misapprehensions about the Origins of Language
5. Language as an Evolutionary Curiosity
6. The Local Optimality of Language
Part II The Functional Anatomy of Speech
7. Putting Sounds Together
8. Protolanguage
9. The Mechanics of Syntax
10. Syntax and Meaning
11. The Structure of Meanings
12. The Emergence of Meaning
Part III The Ethology of Language
13. Conversation Behaviour
14. Language as Information
15. The Birth of Argumentation
16. Language as an Evolutionary Paradox
17. The Political Origins of Language
18. Epilogue