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Private Knowledge, Public Tensions: Theory Commitment in Postwar American Linguistics

Propelled by a desire to understand natural language, American linguists of the postwar
period brought the tools of the era to bear on the study of syntax: computer science, math-
ematical graph theory, and even Cold War strategy. Three syntactic theories were enun-
ciated, each trying to untangle the mysteries of our ability to form and use sentences.
These theories interacted on a nearly daily basis, influencing and challenging each other
through the s. By the end of the decade, one had established clear dominance: Noam
Chomsky’s theory, developed at . Combining contemporary history of science tools
with linguistics-specific concepts, this study explores the dynamics of the syntactic theory-
choice debates from  to . I argue that these debates can only be fully understood
through a confluence of four themes: explanation, pedagogy, knowledge transmission,
and lay linguistics. Together, these themes explain how linguists selected and evaluated
theories, how students were trained to think about and use syntax, how ideas and people
spread across the United States, and how academic theories played out in peripheral disci-
plines. They also resolve the central paradox running through this study: how did Noam
Chomsky’s theory – a theory whose proponents valued the private transmission of un-
derground knowledge and actively prevented outsiders from accessing research – spread
across the country and gain a majority of supporters? By paying particular attention to
the ideas and problems which mattered to the linguists of the time, this study presents a
critical and novel history of postwar American linguistics. In doing so, it rectifies the lack
of a balanced, historically-informed account of the discipline. What little literature exists
on the history of syntax in America bears the imprint of Whig interpretations: it omits the
rival syntactic theories which competed with Chomsky’s theory, the technical linguistics
debates of the period, and pedagogy and the training of young linguists. Most impor-
tantly, it cannot account for the paradox of private knowledge. This study contributes to
our historical understanding by both providing the first history of science based investiga-
tion of postwar American syntax and showcasing a powerful way of investigating theory
development, theory choice, and theory change.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:TORONTO/oai:tspace.library.utoronto.ca:1807/19064
Date19 February 2010
CreatorsNielsen, Janet
ContributorsGillon, Brendan
Source SetsUniversity of Toronto
Languageen_ca
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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