Linguistics Seminar - Prof Bar-On
Pragmatics: Language, Animal Communication, and ‘Protolanguage’

Pragmatics: Language, Animal Communication, and ‘Protolanguage’
Several theorists of language evolution agree that “language as we know it had to be preceded by something intermediate between true language and an ACS [animal communication system]” (Bickerton 2009). This hypothetical evolutionary intermediary has been referred to as “Protolanguage”. Recently, animal communication theorists have argued that we should pursue a ‘pragmatics-first’ approach to the evolution of language. This gives rise to the question what sense we could give to the idea of a pragmatic Protolanguage. After distinguishing two different ways ‘pragmatics’ has been construed – one ‘Carnapian’, the other ‘Gricean’ – I consider a candidate ‘intermediary’ conception, inspired by recent work on formal ‘monkey linguistics’ (due to Schlenker et al.). I argue that Schlenker et al.’s analysis is not fit to serve the purposes of pragmatics-first approaches. Understanding why can help point us in the direction of a better – psychologically based – construal of intermediate pragmatics.
University of Connecticut