Noam Chomsky, Fundamental Issues in Linguistics (April 2019 at MIT) - Lecture 1

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 26 чер 2019
  • This is the first lecture of a two lecture series given by Noam Chomsky (10 and 12 April 2019) at MIT.
    The second lecture: • Noam Chomsky, Fundamen...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 144

  • @englishplusacademy9211
    @englishplusacademy9211 3 роки тому +103

    A legend in the field of language. It is nice to see him giving live lecture.

    • @NazriB
      @NazriB 2 роки тому

      Lies again? Nurofen + Aspirin

  • @mytechid9748
    @mytechid9748 4 роки тому +131

    Choms' still got it!

  • @doubtingthelimit
    @doubtingthelimit 2 роки тому +94

    I really struggled paying attention to what he was saying, until I set it to 1,5 times the speed. My mind finally managed fully to focus on Chomsky‘s lecture (I have adhd), and this was great! 😊❤️

    • @uydfi35
      @uydfi35 2 роки тому +5

      i was just about to say this could be related to adhd since the same happens to me, glad you already know haha, glad you enjoyed the lecture, much love!

    • @doubtingthelimit
      @doubtingthelimit 2 роки тому +2

      @@uydfi35 I was only diagnosed two months ago, so it’s amazing to not feel dumb or like the weird one out and realized my brain is just wired a little bit different. Thank you for replying ❤️

    • @RobKohr
      @RobKohr 2 роки тому +2

      There is a Firefox add-on called Video Speed Controller, and a similar on chrome. After a while you get used to faster speeds, and even the 2x limit that youtube gives you isn't enough, and a video like this is pretty comfortable at 3-3.5x.

    • @abisatyaahnaf1092
      @abisatyaahnaf1092 Рік тому

      Hard to understand

    • @SupeHero00
      @SupeHero00 Рік тому +3

      Same for me and I don't have adhd

  • @khashayarmotarjemi5442
    @khashayarmotarjemi5442 3 роки тому +57

    2:17 that's one of the coolest things I've ever seen.

  • @czarquetzal8344
    @czarquetzal8344 2 роки тому +6

    A very prolific thinker and public intellectual!

  • @lateefalqasab6864
    @lateefalqasab6864 4 роки тому +24

    Thanks for sharing this rare masterpiece.

  • @docnerd4570
    @docnerd4570 2 роки тому +4

    Thank you for sharing. Such a legend.

  • @letssuperfuntime
    @letssuperfuntime 3 роки тому +32

    What a gem this lecture is.
    Thanks for sharing.

  • @farahali5754
    @farahali5754 Рік тому

    بحترم جداااااااا كبار السن في التعليم لا مثيل لهم
    Youth , his body language is more than mental expressions and thoughts

  • @deelirious
    @deelirious 4 роки тому +62

    what a luxury, thanks for sharing

  • @shahedahmed4751
    @shahedahmed4751 3 роки тому +6

    Choms' still got the charms!

  • @Risingsun294
    @Risingsun294 2 роки тому +12

    Best of the best for this guy..he makes us linguistics so damned proud

  • @moctarbebaha7582
    @moctarbebaha7582 4 роки тому +25

    Thank you so much for sharing this.

  • @user-cx5ni7me6l
    @user-cx5ni7me6l 2 роки тому

    Thanks for the upload.

  • @rembautimes8808
    @rembautimes8808 3 роки тому

    Fantastic video

  • @issamrian3494
    @issamrian3494 4 роки тому +26

    My dear friend Iliass, I dedicate this lecture to you.

  • @Blancobobea
    @Blancobobea 4 роки тому +2

    Thank you for sharing!!!

  • @mr.k905
    @mr.k905 2 роки тому +7

    A master in the field of langue, unfortunately not in the field of speaking.

  • @easayr5270
    @easayr5270 4 роки тому +1

    Thanks for sharing this gem

  • @aaasthaa
    @aaasthaa 2 роки тому +1

    Julia falk
    Jesperson- notion of structure in mind

  • @BrenoAguiar97
    @BrenoAguiar97 3 роки тому +24

    In some places on Earth, we can't even think about having classes with the God Chomsky.

  • @navenchang
    @navenchang Рік тому

    Thanks.

  • @farahali5754
    @farahali5754 Рік тому

    Perfect , A few good men

  • @ghofranemohamed6782
    @ghofranemohamed6782 Рік тому +1

    He's genius,😍

  • @serdaracar.official
    @serdaracar.official 3 роки тому

    the king.

  • @user-mq1gm9gm7v
    @user-mq1gm9gm7v 10 місяців тому

    wow! a legend!

  • @melodyjang2876
    @melodyjang2876 3 роки тому +4

    I hope there is transcription available. It would be my valuable possession.

    • @czarquetzal8344
      @czarquetzal8344 2 роки тому

      Why do you need a transcript? Just listen to him.

  • @MartinHaumann1
    @MartinHaumann1 4 роки тому +4

    Can someone within the field point towards the best textbooks to get into the theories, where the field is and the immediate frontier technical tasks ahead for bio-linguistics? Thank you.

    • @MartinHaumann1
      @MartinHaumann1 4 роки тому +1

      @James Just ordered it James. Thank you.

    • @brownshuri4820
      @brownshuri4820 3 роки тому

      Could you share the book name for bio linguistics??

    • @mgm8075
      @mgm8075 2 роки тому

      what was the book?

    • @ianthompson926
      @ianthompson926 2 роки тому

      What was the boom?

  • @abdulatifhamid1011
    @abdulatifhamid1011 2 роки тому +1

    wow indeed he is a greatest linguist

  • @user-ii7nr7ls9h
    @user-ii7nr7ls9h 3 роки тому +12

    رحم الله من وضع لنا ترجمة بالعربية

    • @BigBossTV7
      @BigBossTV7 Рік тому

      لن تفيدكم الترجمة في شيء لأن ما يقوله ينطبق خاصة على اللغة الإنجليزية والفكر الغربي.

  • @eatthecoffee7952
    @eatthecoffee7952 4 роки тому +2

    thanks for this

  • @user-op4pl6dw1i
    @user-op4pl6dw1i 2 роки тому

    Good morning I have reserch how can I be in contact with you thanks

  • @tongusaphea6156
    @tongusaphea6156 2 роки тому

    I hope that other video can have subtitle for help person that english not good like me thaks you🥰

  • @jwkelley
    @jwkelley 3 роки тому

    What is the book he is talking about Angela Ferricis? Sorry for butchering the name.. State of the art in Neurolinguistics? time stamp 1.16:22

    • @jozefsitarcik629
      @jozefsitarcik629 3 роки тому +1

      It is Angela Friederici. And the book is "Language in Our Brain: The Origins of a Uniquely Human Capacity" with foreword by N.Chomsky

  • @beahumane
    @beahumane 2 роки тому

    Great👌👌
    #beahumane

  • @leonsantamaria9845
    @leonsantamaria9845 12 днів тому

    What and what.... professor Noam Chomsky....l will understand... you..class...l mad my self.....(Merge...p,q, ws....a,b....👍👋😄

  • @silasterkelsen5312
    @silasterkelsen5312 4 роки тому +8

    Thanks for the upload. Could anyone help with the exact references to new studies and new books mr. Chomsky mentions so I can finde them? Unfortunately I was not able to find them.

  • @justbeyourself-gx3nd
    @justbeyourself-gx3nd 3 роки тому +2

    thanks a lot!

  • @christianhegemann1911
    @christianhegemann1911 3 роки тому +2

    The quintessence of all communications is the misunderstanding.

  • @yasseralrefaee3818
    @yasseralrefaee3818 4 роки тому +1

    Thanks

  • @TravisRiver
    @TravisRiver 3 роки тому +10

    He's 90 in this video!?! I feel like today, mid-COVID, all beard, his body is preserving all his energy for his piercing intellect.

  • @emiliogonzalez1412
    @emiliogonzalez1412 Рік тому

    That questioner is pretty confused by Noam’s use of the word neural nets but I think he doesn’t know the term refers to both biological and artificial systems. It’s just common to use it in an artificial context these days.

  • @dundoderdumme3044
    @dundoderdumme3044 2 роки тому

    49:44 What does he say? It's hard to understand. Chorine language?

    • @560crude2
      @560crude2 2 роки тому

      poor i-language I guess

  • @EuDouArteHipHopArtCulture21
    @EuDouArteHipHopArtCulture21 2 роки тому

    22:00

  • @reverie4632
    @reverie4632 4 роки тому +4

    what is the book he is referencing to at 1:14:50?

    • @khrazza
      @khrazza 4 роки тому

      Tell me plz

    • @ragnarw.eliansson5299
      @ragnarw.eliansson5299 4 роки тому

      @@khrazza ISBN: 978-0395951057

    • @kieronmcnulty6177
      @kieronmcnulty6177 4 роки тому +3

      I think it is: Memory and the Computational Brain - Why Cognitive Science Will Transform Neuroscience - C.R. Gallistel and Adam Philip King

  • @gregpringle1299
    @gregpringle1299 3 роки тому

    Wow, no one noticed that X-bar theory ruled out exocentric constructions! It was a central point of structuralism -- how could you have missed it, Noam?

  • @Josephus_vanDenElzen
    @Josephus_vanDenElzen 10 місяців тому

    1:50 Galileo 2:08 How is it possible to express an inffinite number of ideas with a couple of dozens sounds, which in itself have nothing in common with the thoughts in our minds and allow us to understand what is not present in consicousness?
    That's indeed an interesting question. But, doesn't he goes too far with 3:06 "everything we can conceive and the most diverse movements of our soul" Some experiences are auditory and visual; consider colours, one can tell a blind man everything there is to know about colours and yet when he would miraculously starts seeing for the first time his experience will be expanded.

    • @halfcadence1417
      @halfcadence1417 6 місяців тому

      Conception and expression are not the same thing

  • @linguistics1224
    @linguistics1224 Рік тому

    What is this about?

  • @vinm300
    @vinm300 2 роки тому

    Play on speed 1.5

  • @two_kopecks
    @two_kopecks Рік тому

    16

  • @autentyk5735
    @autentyk5735 2 роки тому +1

    There is very little linguistics meat & potatoes on youtube as of late 2021.
    Hats off to Noam Chomsky, but you won't learn a whole lot from this lecture here.

    • @lukebradley7984
      @lukebradley7984 2 роки тому +3

      Abralin is the closest for a semi-lay audience. For something more structured, there is Martin Hilpert's long-running series. There are also a myriad of professors who put great stuff up just as a kind of personal record and get next to no views (for obvious reasons); a random example is Nathan Hill (SOAS).

  • @dyssakis
    @dyssakis Рік тому

    It's sad that the recording sucks so much

  • @user-tx6et2nu5e
    @user-tx6et2nu5e 9 місяців тому

    That Wink....

  • @casteretpollux
    @casteretpollux Рік тому

    Language is social and historic and evolves rapidly in a social context and changing world. It's for communication. I'm.not seeing any mystery. Would anyone like to explain?

    • @atheoma
      @atheoma 8 місяців тому +2

      the mistery has been repeatedly articulated by noam in numerous interviews and lectures including this one. namely, the spoken/written language seemingly operates as a linear representation of symbols. on the other hand, reading or listening to a speech, we effectively ignore the linear sequence of words and decode the message as a complex structure which is not explicitly given. that means, we posses implicit ability to process any message tho this ability is totally separated from conciousness and unreachable by introspection. human kids demonstrate an exclusive ability to acquire language instinctly, long before they obtain enough linguistic data to learn the sintactic rules by statistic generalization of experience. the language is used almost exclusively for generating thought. humans, just as other animals, didn’t need language to communicate. being unable to generate complex recursive sintactic structures, big apes have still a profound system of communication with which they can communicate efficiently and sufficiently. the organs of speech were there long before the emergence of language so as in animals.
      try to scientifically explain all this with trivial statements like ‘language is social and historic and evolves rapidly in a social context and changing world’.

    • @czarquetzal8344
      @czarquetzal8344 5 місяців тому

      Read poetry. Is the language of poetry serves to communicate?

  • @Lokitofrances
    @Lokitofrances 2 роки тому

    Hello everyone! Could someone translate these lectures into Spanish? I'm very interested, but I don't understand any English. Thanks

  • @justinjozokos1699
    @justinjozokos1699 3 роки тому +14

    If you watch at 1.5 speed, he talks about as fast as a normal person. You're welcome

    • @mathman2170
      @mathman2170 3 роки тому +1

      I tried "2x" but found 1.5 to be optimal. LOL

    • @skynut
      @skynut 3 роки тому +1

      Thxs...this suggestion is a gem

    • @zlatashkolnaya4378
      @zlatashkolnaya4378 3 роки тому

      LOL, I actually like his natural speed, it's relaxing

  • @inef85
    @inef85 2 роки тому +2

    12:18 "Voluntary action is not a question which is currently fit for productive inquiry. " 👍 Brilliant response to the next time someone asks me why i broke something

  • @czarquetzal8344
    @czarquetzal8344 4 місяці тому

    I like the philosophical foundation of his linguistics - Essentialism. It retains something that cannot be fully grasped by empirical science

  • @saleh9946
    @saleh9946 3 роки тому +3

    The first time I see vowels and diphthongs alive

    • @saleh9946
      @saleh9946 3 роки тому

      I used to hear and read them in written

  • @scottcampbell7384
    @scottcampbell7384 Місяць тому

    Mental giant, moral fool. I can still see him singing with Hugo Chavez before the demise of Venezuela. After the demise was well underway, Noam tried to back pedal with the typical "nobody ever does socialism right" lame excuse. PS_ I adore the comments...I haven't seen this much fawning since Bambi was released by Walt Disney studious in 1942.

  • @ghirardellichocolate201
    @ghirardellichocolate201 3 роки тому +1

    You know how democracy is not about inheritance. Basically just because one of the family members is a professor does not mean the other one has to be a professor as well? So in corrupt society where everyone is about connections mathematics does not work neither does economics.

  • @noresponse1068
    @noresponse1068 2 роки тому

    He still alive?

  • @chickenfeed6272
    @chickenfeed6272 3 роки тому +1

    SNORE

  • @chuckbowie5833
    @chuckbowie5833 3 роки тому +3

    Interesting that, after all these years, this guy a) keeps misquoting Saussure and b) keeps conflating explanation with arbitrary reduction. Shame.

  • @DS-yg4qs
    @DS-yg4qs 3 роки тому +3

    Starts to talk about language... there he goes with Turing and Godel. No no no... language is about art, not math.

    • @Crowdle
      @Crowdle 2 роки тому +3

      Yeah he really does inflate the complexity in explanation while also somehow managing to remove what’s natural about language

    • @jdm3656
      @jdm3656 Рік тому +2

      Language is used in both art and mathematics.

  • @dresdenliam
    @dresdenliam 2 роки тому +2

    Let's go Brandon

  • @brandgardner211
    @brandgardner211 4 роки тому +4

    "...it's fiendishly difficult to give an explanation for the evolution of almost any trait..." Could it be because the idea of "evolution" is, basically, rubbish?

    • @kieronmcnulty6177
      @kieronmcnulty6177 4 роки тому +16

      No. It's because nature is difficult to understand.

    • @brandgardner211
      @brandgardner211 4 роки тому +1

      And it becomes even harder to understand when you approach it with all sorts of dogmatic assumptions.

    • @kieronmcnulty6177
      @kieronmcnulty6177 4 роки тому +10

      I don't understand your comment. Do you really think that the Theory of Evolution is a dogmatic assumption. Do you believe it to be rubbish?

    • @brandgardner211
      @brandgardner211 4 роки тому +4

      If you read Stephen Jay Gould's "Structure of Evolutionary Theory" his magnum opus, essentially [over 1,000 pgs] it is clear that the theory has gone through so many changes that it is hard to get a clear fix on what exactly it is. It also seems to have many logical holes -- which have been pointed out by, for ex., Prof. David Berlinski, and others. And, as Rupert Sheldrake has emphasized, genes don't account for many aspects of an organism -- especially as regards its form, shape. I think the theory has become a kind of secular dogma, substituting for religion, and questioning it to any degree or in any way prompts an intense and irrational hostility -- consider the venomous response given to Jerry Fodor's work, for instance -- you can see it here on yt, some people in that audience seemed like they wanted to run him out of town. I think it has become a fixed, entrenched, at times irrational, dogmatic, mental structure in some intellectual circles.

    • @kieronmcnulty6177
      @kieronmcnulty6177 4 роки тому +6

      Of course its gone through changes as it's an aspect of science, science doesn't stay static. The theories of evolution have changed over time with new research, new evidence and new discoveries. Would you expect anything else? Darwin didn't know anything about genes and the modern synthesis versions of evolutionary theory have had to incorporate evo-devo approaches. The fundamentals are pretty rock solid though. I absolutely agree that evolution and genetics do not account for everything in biology. Chomsky makes that point repeatedly in his writings and lectures around this subject, I've seen that he sceptical about the many 'just-so' stories, particularly in evolutionary psychology. There's an interesting YT video in which he talks some of these these things - "Chomsky on Evolution", Stony Brook Interview #3 with Richard Larson" I think from about 2003 or so.

  • @brandgardner211
    @brandgardner211 4 роки тому +5

    Trying to square linguistic theory with some supposed "theory of evolution" is a wrong turn. Just stick to language as it actually is, focus entirely on that. And forget about how it supposedly came about. Self-evidently it did. Even if you could show the "evolution", it still explains nothing in terms of actual human language as it actually is. It is a typical way of going off into irrelevance, with overly puffed up "theories" re the origin of traits, etc., posing as, in this case, essentially, philosophical anthropology. But it can never be that. Chomsky here is not heeding his own advice to not be distracted by psychologically compelling but essentially irrelevant happenstance, circumstance, accidental things, etc.

    • @Laocoon283
      @Laocoon283 10 місяців тому +1

      There's a reason why M.I.T has a linguistics department. I'll let you try and figure out why M.I.T might be interested in the origins and evolution of language.

    • @czarquetzal8344
      @czarquetzal8344 5 місяців тому

      How can linguistic evolution irrelevant? It helps us understand language acquisition and the role of culture in its change. Remembers that language is not used in the vacuum. It needs space and time for it to function and develop..