

He refutes the "comic history" of linguistic determinism, the belief that language shapes thinking, undermining it with examples from music, mathematics, and kinship theory. Starting with what he calls a "grammar gene," Pinker describes the way primitives, children (his special interest), even the deaf evolve natural languages responding to the universal need to communicate.

Variously mellow, intense, and bemused-but never boring-Pinker (Director, Center for Cognitive Neuroscience/MIT), emphasizes Darwinian theory and defines language as a "biological adaptation to communicate." While Pinker bases his argument on the innate nature of language, he situates language in that transitional area between instinct and learned behavior, between nature and culture. 1439) popularizing Chomsky's once controversial theories explaining the biological basis of language. 1303 Ray Jackendorf's Patterns in the Mind, p. Another in a series of books (Joel Davis's Mother Tongue, p.
