Your purchase has been completed. Your documents are now available to view.
Changing the currency will empty your shopping cart.
A provocative investigation into the making of human languages and the exceptional nature of human adaptation.
A bold hypothesis and a book worth reading.... Recommended.
If you're into the evolution of language, you'll love The Domestication of Language.
This serious piece of academic writing is a must-read for those working on the frontiers of the philosophy of language.
Nikhil Sonnad:[The Domestication of Language] presents an intriguing new theory of cultural evolution.
Gideon Rosen, Princeton University:A tour de force. Drawing on recent work in the philosophy of language, evolutionary biology, and ethology, Daniel Cloud has fashioned a new account of the origins of our capacity for linguistic communication. Cloud's book is both a wonderfully readable introduction to the topic and a bold and original work of scholarship. Any attempt to reconstruct the origins of language will be speculative, but this is the best sort of speculation: rigorous, scientifically informed, strikingly imaginative, and utterly plausible.
Adam Elga, Princeton University:This stimulating and engaging book lucidly defends a remarkable proposal. Just as a breeder of honeybees makes choices that influence the evolution of domesticated bees, all of us—by choosing which words and practices to employ and which ones to scowl, chuckle, or roll our eyes at—actively influence the evolution of our language and culture.
Alex Rosenberg, Duke University:Cloud has done much more than given us a 'just-so story' about the evolution of language. He has identified the real obstacles it had to surmount and creatively drawn on the best hard science to show how it overcame them.
Philip Kitcher, Columbia University:A superbly original book and an exciting piece of philosophy. Cloud builds a serious account of the evolution of language that recognizes the long and complex process that links the prior state (nothing like language at all) to the end state (language of the kinds now in existence) and that responds to the points of greatest difficulty in that process.
Kim Sterelny, Australian National University:The Domestication of Language brings an important new perspective to an extraordinarily difficult and important topic: the evolution of language. Language is the result of intelligence: an invented social and communicative technology, invented not by a Promethean genius, but multi-generationally by us all as we respond to and experiment in our specific situations. Over many generations, we have converted our original, wild, native endowment of communicative capacity to something new, special, and transforming.
Please login or register with De Gruyter to order this product.