Original article/commentary:

The bilingual brain revisited: A comment on Hagen (2008)

Evolutionary Psychology 6(1): 182-185 Lawrence A. Hirschfeld, Departments of Anthropology and Psychology, New School for Social Research, USA, hirschfl@newschool.edu

Abstract

L.K. Hagen (2008; Evolutionary Psychology, 6, 43-63) proposes that effortless first acquisition compared to more difficult second language acquisition provides evidence that the monolinguistic nature of our ancestral social environments implies a near-constant state of intergroup conflict. I argue to the contrary that the capacity to acquire multiple languages simultaneously in childhood without decrement to first language acquisition suggests that there was selection pressure for multilingualism. I further argue that this cognitive capacity is evidence for an ancestral environment in which distinct groups commingled (e.g., through long-term trading and marriage relationships) in relative security.

Keywords

bilingualism, language acquisition, ancestral social environment

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Evolutionary Psychology - An open access peer-reviewed journal - ISSN 1474-7049 © Ian Pitchford and Robert M. Young; individual articles © the author(s)
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