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El. knyga: Introducing Evolutionary Pragmatics: How Language Emerges from Use

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This collection highlights a range of perspectives on the emerging body of research on evolutionary pragmatics, expanding the borders of language evolution research and indicating exciting new directions for the future of the field.

The volume adopts a broad view of pragmatics, providing a counterpoint to classical models of language evolution by exploring the ways in which the origins of language can be traced through the emergence of language structures from use in context. The book synthesizes different lines of inquiry, ranging from evolutionary linguistics to cognitive linguistics, philosophy, and cognitive pragmatics, among other fields, which foreground the impact of the environment on language and of language, through speaker use, on context. The volume is organized around three sections, each taking in turn a different dimension of evolutionary pragmatics research; the origins of language as seen in animal communication; a closer look at the use of language in interaction for the formation of communication channel and linguistic meaning; the role of cooperation and competition dynamics for the emergence of language structure.

This book will be of particular interest to scholars in evolutionary linguistics, language origins, cognitive pragmatics, cognitive archaeology, and cognitive semiotics, as well as related areas in philosophy, psychology, and anthropology.



This collection highlights a range of perspectives on the emerging body of research on evolutionary pragmatics, expanding the borders of language evolution research and indicating exciting new directions for the future of the field.

Contents

List of Contributors

Introduction: What is evolutionary pragmatics? (Ines Adornetti & Francesco
Ferretti)

Part I: Animal communication

Chapter 2: Animal signalling between informing and influencing: setting the
stage for a pragmatic-rhetorical model of communication (Ines Adornetti)

Chapter 3: The cognitive foundations of ostensive-inferential communication:
Insight from the study of non-human primates communication (Alessandra
Chiera)

Part II: Communication channel and meaning construction

Chapter 4: The Role of Communication Channel in the Emergence of Novel
Communication Systems in Experimental Semiotics (Michael Pleyer, Angelo D.
Delliponti, Svetlana Kuleshova, Marek Placiski, Renato Raia, Giulia
Sanguedolce, Marta Sibierska)

Chapter 5: A Usage-Based Perspective on Evolutionary Pragmatics (Michael
Pleyer & Stefan Hartmann)

Part III: Cooperation and competition in the emergence of language structure


Chapter 6: A four-stage model of the co-evolution of hominin cooperation and
communication (Jordan Zlatev, Aaron Stutz & Przemyslaw ywiczyski).

Chapter 7: Agonistic Conversation. A cognitive-interactive perspective on the
origin of grammar. (Francesco Ferretti)

Chapter 8: The role of early expressive uses of language in brain and
language evolution (Antonio Benķtez-Burraco & Ljiljana Progovac)

Index
Ines Adornetti is an associate professor of Philosophy of Language and Language Disorders at Roma Tre University, Italy.

Francesco Ferretti is a full professor of Philosophy of Language and Cognitive Sciences at Roma Tre University, Italy.