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by pjlegato
3572 days ago
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Many -- perhaps even most -- of his fiercest opponents within linguistics agree strongly with most of his political views. George Lakoff, for example, is well known as a leading anti-Chomskyite linguist, and also as a vocal far-leftist whose political views largely echo Chomsky's. |
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Chomsky is, I believe, best referred to as a social libertarian, which means that he opposes both state and enterprise power and see them as more or less the same, and instead favors the individual. It is clear here why Marxists don't like him, at all.
I think this is also why the authors of the OA challenge Chomsky without offering anything other than minor claims hidden away throughout the text that language is a product of social interaction rather than a capability that lies within the individual. It is about the collective versus the individual and as a fierce individualist, the authors disagree with Chomsky on political grounds, not scientific.