creators_name: Mondal, Prakash creators_id: mndlprksh@yahoo.co.in type: journale datestamp: 2011-12-16 00:11:24 lastmod: 2011-12-16 00:11:24 metadata_visibility: show title: Can Internalism and Externalism be Reconciled in a Biological Epistemology of Language? ispublished: pub subjects: bio-theory subjects: cog-psy subjects: ling-syntax subjects: phil-epist full_text_status: public abstract: This paper is an attempt at exploring the possibility of reconciling the two interpretations of biolinguistics which have been recently projected by Koster(Biolinguistics 3(1):61–92, 2009). The two interpretations—trivial and nontrivial—can be roughly construed as non-internalist and internalist conceptions of biolinguistics respectively. The internalist approach boils down to a conception of language where language as a mental grammar in the form of I-language grows and functions like a biological organ. On the other hand, under such a construal consistent with Koster’s (Biolinguistics 3(1):61-92, 2009), the non-internalist version does not necessarily have to be externalist in nature; rather it is a matter of mutual reinforcement of biology and culture under the rubric of a co-evolutionary dynamics. Here it will be argued that the apparent dichotomy between these two conceptions of biolinguistics can perhaps be resolved if we have a richer synthesis that accounts for both internalism and non-internalism. date: 2011-05 date_type: published publication: Biosemiotics publisher: Springer refereed: TRUE citation: Mondal, Prakash (2011) Can Internalism and Externalism be Reconciled in a Biological Epistemology of Language? [Journal (On-line/Unpaginated)] document_url: http://cogprints.org/7708/1/fulltext.pdf