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Elizabeth Bates and the Search for the Roots of Human Language

Elizabeth Bates and the Search for the Roots of Human Language

In the 1970s, a young psychologist challenged a popular theory of how we acquire language, launching a fierce debate that continues to this day.

Lost Women of Science

April 25, 202437m 14s

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Show Notes

“We were each put on earth to torment the other,” says cognitive scientist Steven Pinker of Elizabeth Bates, a psychologist who challenged the prevailing theory about how humans acquire language. Bates believed that language emerges from interactions between our brains and our environments, and that we do not have an innate language capacity. To many, that sounds like an innocuous statement. But in making these claims, Bates challenged formidable linguists like Pinker and Noam Chomsky, placing herself at the center of a heated debate that remains unresolved half a century later.

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