Abstract

Language and Theory of Mind come together in communication, but their relationship has been intensely contested. I hypothesize that pragmatic markers connect language and Theory of Mind and enable their co-development and co-evolution through a positive feedback loop, whereby the development of one skill boosts the development of the other. I propose to test this hypothesis by investigating two types of pragmatic markers: demonstratives (e.g., ‘this’ vs. ‘that’ in English) and articles (e.g., ‘a’ vs. ‘the’). Pragmatic markers are closed-class words that encode non-representational information that is unavailable to consciousness, but accessed automatically in processing. These markers have been associated with implicit Theory of Mind because they are used to establish joint attention (e.g., ‘I prefer that one’) and mark shared knowledge (e.g., ‘We bought the house’ vs. ‘We bought a house’). Here I develop a theoretical account of how joint attention (as driven by the use of demonstratives) is the basis for children’s later tracking of common ground (as marked by definite articles). The developmental path from joint attention to common ground parallels language change, with demonstrative forms giving rise to definite articles. This parallel opens the possibility of modelling the emergence of Theory of Mind in human development in tandem with its routinization across language communities and generations of speakers. I therefore propose that, in order to understand the relationship between language and Theory of Mind, we should study pragmatics at three parallel timescales: during language acquisition, language use, and language change.

Highlights

  • Mastering communication takes more than mastering a language

  • The parallels across language acquisition and language change open the possibility of modelling Theory of Mind development across childhood, and across generations of speakers, driven by and in turn driving the evolution of pragmatic markers

  • There is a fundamental difference between these two accounts: Heyes and Frith focus on explicit Theory of Mind, whereas the social cognition skills that sustain a grammar of engagement would be better described as implicit

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Mastering communication takes more than mastering a language. Imagine that you and your partner are going to the theatre: you may say ‘I forgot the tickets’ to imply that you need to go back home. I hypothesize that pragmatic markers connect language and Theory of Mind and enable their co-development in ontogeny and co-evolution in diachrony and phylogeny through a positive feedback loop, whereby the development of one skill boosts the development of the other To test this new hypothesis, I propose to investigate children’s acquisition and adults’ use of two kinds of pragmatic markers: demonstratives (e.g., ‘this’ vs ‘that’ in English) and articles (e.g., ‘a’ vs ‘the’); as well as their cultural evolution (i.e. their diachronic change through processes of learning and use). My proposal will have a wider scope than previous work on the relationship between language and Theory of Mind, which has mainly focused on children’s understanding of belief (see Tompkins et al 2019) This means that the present account does not hinge on the ongoing debate in the Theory of Mind literature about whether the concept of belief is innate or develops during childhood (Onishi and Baillargeon 2005; Heyes 2014). By moving away from discussions of belief nativism, I will focus on communication as the natural arena for Theory of Mind development (Rubio-Fernandez 2017, 2019; Rubio-Fernandez et al 2019)

The three timescales of evolutionary pragmatics
Hypothesis 2
Hypothesis 3
From grammar to acquisition
Demonstratives in cognitive development
Demonstratives in interaction
Typological studies
Psycholinguistic studies
Acquisition studies
Expanding common ground
Pragmatic relativity
The ineffable power of procedural meanings
Findings
Concluding remarks
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call