Unconscious gaps in Jackendoff 's "How language helps us think"?

Pragmatics and Cognition 4 (1):65-80 (1996)
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Abstract

Jackendoff comes to some appealing overall conclusions, but several of his assumptions and arguments are questionable. The present commentary points out the following problems: oversimplifications in the translation-based argument for the independence of language and thought; a lack of consideration of the possibility of unconscious use of internalized natural languages; insufficient consideration of possible characteristics of languages of thought ; neglect of the possibility of thinking in example-oriented and metaphorical ways; unfair bias in contrasting visual to linguistic imagery; neglect of other types of imagery; and neglect of the possibility of unconscious attentional processes.

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original Barnden, John A. (1995) "Unconscious gaps in Jackendoff 's "How language helps us think"?". Pragmatics and Cognition 4(1):65-80

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John A Barnden
University of Birmingham

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