Behavioral and Brain Sciences



Short Communication

Language is fundamentally a social affair


Justin H. G. Williams a1
a1 Department of Child Health, University of Aberdeen School of Medicine, Royal Aberdeen Children's Hospital, Aberdeen AB25 2ZG, Scotland, United Kingdom justin.Williams@abdn.ac.uk http://www.abdn.ac.uk/child_health/williams.hti

Abstract

Perhaps the greatest evolutionary advantage conferred by spoken language was its ability to communicate mentalistic concepts, rather than just extending the vocabulary of action already served by an imitation function. An appreciation that the mirror-neuron system served a simple mentalising function before gestural communication sets Arbib's theory in a more appropriate social cognitive context.