Minimalist Essays
Editor
| Harvard University
The Minimalism Program is many things to many researchers, and there are by now many alternative versions of it. Central to all is the fundamental question: to what extent is the human language faculty an optimal solution to minimal design specifications. Taken as a whole, the volume outlines the main features of Minimalism, its historical and conceptual sources, and provides an illustration of minimalist theorizing by looking at several properties of the syntactic component of grammar. Some contributions concentrate on what kind of computational tools are made available in a minimalist syntactic component, and how the computational system interacts with external and interface domains of the mind/brain. Other contributions specifically focus on direct empirical gains that emerge from adopting minimalist guidelines.
[Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today, 91] 2006. xvi, 399 pp.
Publishing status: Available
© John Benjamins Publishing Company
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
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vii
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List of contributors
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ix–xi
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xiii–xv
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Part I: Minimalism: A Point of Entry
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3–15
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Part II: Minimalist Tools and Architectural Concerns
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19–34
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35–67
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68–96
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97–114
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115–159
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160–181
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182–217
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Part III: Minimalist Tools and Empirical Pay-offs
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221–231
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233–248
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249–267
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268–287
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288–325
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326–394
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Index
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395–399
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Cited by
Cited by 1 other publications
Engdahl, Elisabet
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Subjects
BIC Subject: CF – Linguistics
BISAC Subject: LAN009000 – LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / General