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The Stuff of Thought
Book

The Stuff of Thought

Language as a Window into Human Nature

Viking, 2007 more...


Editorial Rating

8

Qualities

  • Innovative
  • Applicable

Recommendation

Steven Pinker’s enthusiasm about language comes through everywhere in this book – which is a good thing, because the subject matter itself is dense and complex. This combination results in a curious reading experience: Pinker’s lively style, many anecdotes and extreme lucidity pull you forward in the text, but the difficulty of the questions he raises could stump you for some time. He explores many linguistic theories in such depth that readers without a particular interest in the field may, frankly, get lost or find the book too abstract, despite Pinker’s numerous attempts to ground his discussions in reality. Therefore, while this is a fine book, getAbstract recommends it primarily to patient readers who have a strong interest in language and philosophy. Bring along an open mind and a sense of humor, since Pinker explores language practices – such as obscenities and insults – that may provoke emotional responses.

Take-Aways

  • The relationship between language and reality is not direct.
  • No intrinsic link exists between a word and what it refers to.
  • Models of time, space and causality are built into human language. These models don’t match science’s best understanding of the physical universe.

About the Author

Steven Pinker teaches psychology at Harvard, and is the author of The Language Instinct, How the Mind Works and The Blank Slate, a Pulitzer Prize finalist.


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