Cart | My Downloads | My Account | Help
Audiobooks, Podcasts and Video to Learn From

LearnOutLoud

Home Catalog Languages The Idea of Universality in Linguistics and Human ...
    Search
 
 
    
 

 
Learn About
 
    Free Audio Book
  Download our free audio book for the month of May:
Great American Presidents.
 
The Idea of Universality in Linguistics and Human Rights
 
Author: Noam Chomsky, Elizabeth S. Spelke
Narrator: Noam Chomsky, Elizabeth S. Spelke
Publisher: MIT World
Running Time: 1 Hr. 38 Min.


Get this free title from:

Online Video
(MIT World)
 
If you like our free stuff and would like support our mission to spread free audio & video learning, please feel free to donate:
 
 
 
 
Rate This Title
Average Rating: 3.0 
Based on 2 ratings

Click Stars to Rate: Rate it 1 out of 5Rate it 2 out of 5Rate it 3 out of 5Rate it 4 out of 5Rate it 5 out of 5
Review this title

The Idea of Universality in Linguistics and Human Rights

The Idea of Universality in Linguistics and Human Rights

by Noam Chomsky




If humans have a common, in-born capacity for language, and for such complex behaviors as morality, might the faculties be somehow linked? Noam Chomsky perceives a mere thread of a connection. At breakneck speed, Chomsky leads us through a history of language theory, concluding with the revolutionary model he championed: a universal grammar underpinning all languages that corresponds to an innate capacity of the human brain. While scientists may now have a “clearer grasp of the universals of language,” says Chomsky, notions of universality grow murky as we move “into domains of will, choice and judgment.” Chomsky cites the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights as one example of “broad cross-cultural consensus.” But he brandishes examples of how “our moral and intellectual culture….forcefully rejects universal moral judgments” -- such as continued U.S. refusal to approve anti-torture conventions.

In contrast, Elizabeth Spelke forcefully links “universals in human nature to some of the developments in bringing about a greater balance in human rights.” Thirty years of cognitive and cross cultural research show that humans universally structure their world in terms of objects, have a universal capacity to represent numbers, and to represent other people as “intentional, goal-directed agents whose freely chosen actions are subject to moral evaluation.” Variation among humans flows from another universal capacity: to “freely combine concepts from different core systems.” Spelke speculates that “humans might be gripped by a tremendous illusion that different members of different groups really are fundamentally different” – an illusion that might drive us to conflict and rights abuses. These aspects of human nature pose a major challenge, but, Spelke concludes, a more fundamental faculty “holds the potential key to remedy”—our capacity to “articulate deeply entrenched notions, criticize and get beyond them.”













Write a Review of The Idea of Universality in Linguistics and Human Rights

  • Published: 2002
  • LearnOutLoud.com Product ID: T015562

 Politics  Liberal Politics
 Languages

 

This Author: Noam Chomsky
This Narrator: Noam Chomsky, Elizabeth S. Spelke
This Publisher: MIT World
 
People Who Liked "The Idea of Universality in Linguistics and Human Rights" Also Liked:
Georgia Stories/Global View
by Jimmy Carter
Format: Audio Download
Price: $ 4.95
Why We're Liberals
by Eric Alterman
Format: Audio Download
Price: $ 22.95
Armed Madhouse
by Greg Palast
Format: Audio Download
Price: $ 17.95
Secularists and Liberals
by Sherwin T. Wine
Format: Audio Download
Price: $ 4.95
Do I Stand Alone?
by Jesse Ventura
Format: Audio Download
Price: $ 10.95
 

We want LearnOutLoud.com to be the most complete and accurate resource for audio and video learning titles. Please let us know if you've found information missing or incorrect on this page.

For suggestions for this page email us at: suggestions@learnoutloud.com.

 

 

Home | About Us | Contact Us | FAQ | Help | Affiliates | Advertise | Gift Certificates | Newsletter | Free Resources
How to Order | Shipping Rates & Policies | Privacy Policy | Return Policy | Customer Service
Copyright © 2005-2012, LearnOutLoud, Inc. All rights reserved.