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Avram Noam Chomsky (born December 7, 1928) is an American professor and public intellectual known for his work in linguistics, political activism, and social criticism. Sometimes called "the father of modern linguistics", Chomsky is also a major figure in analytic philosophy and one of the founders of the field of cognitive science. He is a laureate professor of linguistics at the University of Arizona and an institute professor emeritus at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Among the most cited living authors, Chomsky has written more than 150 books on topics such as linguistics, war, and politics. In addition to his work in linguistics, since the 1960s Chomsky has been an influential voice on the American left as a consistent critic of U.S. foreign policy, contemporary capitalism, and corporate influence on political institutions and the media.
Noam Chomsky | |
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Born | Avram Noam Chomsky December 7, 1928 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
Spouses | Carol Schatz (m. 1949; died 2008)Valeria Wasserman (m. 2014) |
Children | 3, including Aviva |
Father | William Chomsky |
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Academic background | |
Education | University of Pennsylvania (BA, MA, PhD) |
Thesis | Transformational Analysis (1955) |
Doctoral advisor | Zellig Harris |
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Academic work | |
Discipline | Linguistics, analytic philosophy, cognitive science, political criticism |
School or tradition | Anarcho-syndicalism, libertarian socialism |
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Doctoral students |
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Influenced |
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Website | chomsky |
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Born to Ashkenazi Jewish immigrants in Philadelphia, Chomsky developed an early interest in anarchism from alternative bookstores in New York City. He studied at the University of Pennsylvania. During his postgraduate work in the Harvard Society of Fellows, Chomsky developed the theory of transformational grammar for which he earned his doctorate in 1955. That year he began teaching at MIT, and in 1957 emerged as a significant figure in linguistics with his landmark work Syntactic Structures, which played a major role in remodeling the study of language. From 1958 to 1959 Chomsky was a National Science Foundation fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study. He created or co-created the universal grammar theory, the generative grammar theory, the Chomsky hierarchy, and the minimalist program. Chomsky also played a pivotal role in the decline of linguistic behaviorism, and was particularly critical of the work of B. F. Skinner.
An outspoken opponent of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War, which he saw as an act of American imperialism, in 1967 Chomsky rose to national attention for his anti-war essay "The Responsibility of Intellectuals". Becoming associated with the New Left, he was arrested multiple times for his activism and placed on President Richard Nixon's list of political opponents. While expanding his work in linguistics over subsequent decades, he also became involved in the linguistics wars. In collaboration with Edward S. Herman, Chomsky later articulated the propaganda model of media criticism in Manufacturing Consent, and worked to expose the Indonesian occupation of East Timor. His defense of unconditional freedom of speech, including that of Holocaust denial, generated significant controversy in the Faurisson affair of the 1980s. Chomsky's commentary on the Cambodian genocide and the Bosnian genocide also generated controversy. Since retiring from active teaching at MIT, he has continued his vocal political activism, including opposing the 2003 invasion of Iraq and supporting the Occupy movement. An anti-Zionist, Chomsky considers Israel's treatment of Palestinians to be worse than South African–style apartheid, and criticizes U.S. support for Israel.
Chomsky is widely recognized as having helped to spark the cognitive revolution in the human sciences, contributing to the development of a new cognitivistic framework for the study of language and the mind. Chomsky remains a leading critic of U.S. foreign policy, contemporary capitalism, U.S. involvement and Israel's role in the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, and mass media. Chomsky and his ideas remain highly influential in the anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist movements. Since 2017, he has been Agnese Nelms Haury Chair in the Agnese Nelms Haury Program in Environment and Social Justice at the University of Arizona.
Life
Childhood: 1928–1945
Chomsky was born on December 7, 1928, in the East Oak Lane neighborhood of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. His parents, William Chomsky and Elsie Simonofsky, were Jewish immigrants. William had fled the Russian Empire in 1913 to escape conscription and worked in Baltimore sweatshops and Hebrew elementary schools before attending university. After moving to Philadelphia, William became principal of the Congregation Mikveh Israel religious school and joined the Gratz College faculty. He placed great emphasis on educating people so that they would be "well integrated, free and independent in their thinking, concerned about improving and enhancing the world, and eager to participate in making life more meaningful and worthwhile for all", a mission that shaped and was subsequently adopted by his son. Elsie, who also taught at Mikveh Israel, shared her leftist politics and care for social issues with her sons.
Noam's only sibling, David Eli Chomsky (1934–2021), was born five years later, and worked as a cardiologist in Philadelphia. The brothers were close, though David was more easygoing while Noam could be very competitive. They were raised Jewish, being taught Hebrew and regularly involved with discussing the political theories of Zionism; the family was particularly influenced by the Left Zionist writings of Ahad Ha'am. He faced antisemitism as a child, particularly from Philadelphia's Irish and German communities.
Chomsky attended the independent, Deweyite Oak Lane Country Day School and Philadelphia's Central High School, where he excelled academically and joined various clubs and societies, but was troubled by the school's hierarchical and domineering teaching methods. He also attended Hebrew High School at Gratz College, where his father taught.
Chomsky has described his parents as "normal Roosevelt Democrats" with center-left politics, but relatives involved in the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union exposed him to socialism and far-left politics. He was substantially influenced by his uncle and the Jewish leftists who frequented his New York City newspaper stand to debate current affairs. Chomsky himself often visited left-wing and anarchist bookstores when visiting his uncle in the city, voraciously reading political literature. He became absorbed in the story of the 1939 fall of Barcelona and suppression of the Spanish anarchosyndicalist movement, writing his first article on the topic at the age of 10. That he came to identify with anarchism first rather than another leftist movement, he described as a "lucky accident". Chomsky was firmly anti-Bolshevik by his early teens.
University: 1945–1955
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In 1945, at the age of 16, Chomsky began a general program of study at the University of Pennsylvania, where he explored philosophy, logic, and languages and developed a primary interest in learning Arabic. Living at home, he funded his undergraduate degree by teaching Hebrew. Frustrated with his experiences at the university, he considered dropping out and moving to a kibbutz in Mandatory Palestine, but his intellectual curiosity was reawakened through conversations with the linguist Zellig Harris, whom he first met in a political circle in 1947. Harris introduced Chomsky to the field of theoretical linguistics and convinced him to major in the subject. Chomsky's BA honors thesis, "Morphophonemics of Modern Hebrew", applied Harris's methods to the language. Chomsky revised this thesis for his MA, which he received from the University of Pennsylvania in 1951; it was subsequently published as a book. He also developed his interest in philosophy while at university, in particular under the tutelage of Nelson Goodman.
From 1951 to 1955, Chomsky was a member of the Society of Fellows at Harvard University, where he undertook research on what became his doctoral dissertation. Having been encouraged by Goodman to apply, Chomsky was attracted to Harvard in part because the philosopher Willard Van Orman Quine was based there. Both Quine and a visiting philosopher, J. L. Austin of the University of Oxford, strongly influenced Chomsky. In 1952, Chomsky published his first academic article in The Journal of Symbolic Logic. Highly critical of the established behaviorist currents in linguistics, in 1954, he presented his ideas at lectures at the University of Chicago and Yale University. He had not been registered as a student at Pennsylvania for four years, but in 1955 he submitted a thesis setting out his ideas on transformational grammar; he was awarded a Doctor of Philosophy degree for it, and it was privately distributed among specialists on microfilm before being published in 1975 as part of The Logical Structure of Linguistic Theory. Harvard professor George Armitage Miller was impressed by Chomsky's thesis and collaborated with him on several technical papers in mathematical linguistics. Chomsky's doctorate exempted him from compulsory military service, which was otherwise due to begin in 1955.
In 1947, Chomsky began a romantic relationship with Carol Doris Schatz, whom he had known since early childhood. They married in 1949. After Chomsky was made a Fellow at Harvard, the couple moved to the Allston area of Boston and remained there until 1965, when they relocated to the suburb of Lexington. The couple took a Harvard travel grant to Europe in 1953. He enjoyed living in Hashomer Hatzair's HaZore'a kibbutz while in Israel, but was appalled by his interactions with Jewish nationalism, anti-Arab racism and, within the kibbutz's leftist community, Stalinism. On visits to New York City, Chomsky continued to frequent the office of the Yiddish anarchist journal Fraye Arbeter Shtime and became enamored with the ideas of Rudolf Rocker, a contributor whose work introduced Chomsky to the link between anarchism and classical liberalism. Chomsky also read other political thinkers: the anarchists Mikhail Bakunin and Diego Abad de Santillán, democratic socialists George Orwell, Bertrand Russell, and Dwight Macdonald, and works by Marxists Karl Liebknecht, Karl Korsch, and Rosa Luxemburg. His politics were reaffirmed by Orwell's depiction of Barcelona's functioning anarchist society in Homage to Catalonia (1938). Chomsky read the leftist journal Politics, which furthered his interest in anarchism, and the council communist periodical Living Marxism, though he rejected the Marxist orthodoxy of its editor, Paul Mattick.
Early career: 1955–1966
Chomsky befriended two linguists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)—Morris Halle and Roman Jakobson—the latter of whom secured him an assistant professor position there in 1955. At MIT, Chomsky spent half his time on a mechanical translation project and half teaching a course on linguistics and philosophy. He described MIT as open to experimentation where he was free to pursue his idiosyncratic interests. MIT promoted him to the position of associate professor in 1957, and over the next year he was also a visiting professor at Columbia University. The Chomskys had their first child, Aviva, that same year. He also published his first book on linguistics, Syntactic Structures, a work that radically opposed the dominant Harris–Bloomfield trend in the field. Responses to Chomsky's ideas ranged from indifference to hostility, and his work proved divisive and caused "significant upheaval" in the discipline. The linguist John Lyons later asserted that Syntactic Structures "revolutionized the scientific study of language". From 1958 to 1959 Chomsky was a National Science Foundation fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey.
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Chomsky's provocative critique of B. F. Skinner, who viewed language as learned behavior, and its challenge to the dominant behaviorist paradigm thrust Chomsky into the limelight. Chomsky argued that behaviorism underplayed the role of human creativity in learning language and overplayed the role of external conditions in influencing verbal behavior. He proceeded to found MIT's graduate program in linguistics with Halle. In 1961, Chomsky received tenure and became a full professor in the Department of Modern Languages and Linguistics. He was appointed plenary speaker at the Ninth International Congress of Linguists, held in 1962 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, which established him as the de facto spokesperson of American linguistics. Between 1963 and 1965 he consulted on a military-sponsored project to teach computers to understand natural English commands from military generals.
Chomsky continued to publish his linguistic ideas throughout the decade, including in Aspects of the Theory of Syntax (1965), Topics in the Theory of Generative Grammar (1966), and Cartesian Linguistics: A Chapter in the History of Rationalist Thought (1966). Along with Halle, he also edited the Studies in Language series of books for Harper and Row. As he began to accrue significant academic recognition and honors for his work, Chomsky lectured at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1966. These lectures were published as Language and Mind in 1968. In the late 1960s, a high-profile intellectual rift later known as the linguistic wars developed between Chomsky and some of his colleagues and doctoral students—including Paul Postal, John Ross, George Lakoff, and James D. McCawley—who contended that Chomsky's syntax-based, interpretivist linguistics did not properly account for semantic context (general semantics). A post hoc assessment of this period concluded that the opposing programs ultimately were complementary, each informing the other.
Anti-war activism and dissent: 1967–1975
[I]t does not require very far-reaching, specialized knowledge to perceive that the United States was invading South Vietnam. And, in fact, to take apart the system of illusions and deception which functions to prevent understanding of contemporary reality [is] not a task that requires extraordinary skill or understanding. It requires the kind of normal skepticism and willingness to apply one's analytical skills that almost all people have and that they can exercise.
Chomsky joined protests against U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War in 1962, speaking on the subject at small gatherings in churches and homes. His 1967 critique of U.S. involvement, "The Responsibility of Intellectuals", among other contributions to The New York Review of Books, debuted Chomsky as a public dissident. This essay and other political articles were collected and published in 1969 as part of Chomsky's first political book, American Power and the New Mandarins. He followed this with further political books, including At War with Asia (1970), The Backroom Boys (1973), For Reasons of State (1973), and Peace in the Middle East? (1974), published by Pantheon Books. These publications led to Chomsky's association with the American New Left movement, though he thought little of prominent New Left intellectuals Herbert Marcuse and Erich Fromm and preferred the company of activists to that of intellectuals. Chomsky remained largely ignored by the mainstream press throughout this period.
Chomsky also became involved in left-wing activism. Chomsky refused to pay half his taxes, publicly supported students who refused the draft, and was arrested while participating in an anti-war teach-in outside the Pentagon. During this time, Chomsky co-founded the anti-war collective RESIST with Mitchell Goodman, Denise Levertov, William Sloane Coffin, and Dwight Macdonald. Although he questioned the objectives of the 1968 student protests, Chomsky regularly gave lectures to student activist groups and, with his colleague Louis Kampf, ran undergraduate courses on politics at MIT independently of the conservative-dominated political science department. When student activists campaigned to stop weapons and counterinsurgency research at MIT, Chomsky was sympathetic but felt that the research should remain under MIT's oversight and limited to systems of deterrence and defense. Chomsky has acknowledged that his MIT lab's funding at this time came from the military. He later said he considered resigning from MIT during the Vietnam War. There has since been a wide-ranging debate about what effects Chomsky's employment at MIT had on his political and linguistic ideas.
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Chomsky participating in the anti-Vietnam War March on the Pentagon, October 21, 1967 | |
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Chomsky's anti-war activism led to his arrest on multiple occasions and he was on President Richard Nixon's master list of political opponents. Chomsky was aware of the potential repercussions of his civil disobedience, and his wife began studying for her own doctorate in linguistics to support the family in the event of Chomsky's imprisonment or joblessness. Chomsky's scientific reputation insulated him from administrative action based on his beliefs. In 1970 he visited southeast Asia to lecture at Vietnam's Hanoi University of Science and Technology and toured war refugee camps in Laos. In 1973 he helped lead a committee commemorating the 50th anniversary of the War Resisters League.
Chomsky's work in linguistics continued to gain international recognition as he received multiple honorary doctorates. He delivered public lectures at the University of Cambridge, Columbia University (Woodbridge Lectures), and Stanford University. His appearance in a 1971 debate with French continental philosopher Michel Foucault positioned Chomsky as a symbolic figurehead of analytic philosophy. He continued to publish extensively on linguistics, producing Studies on Semantics in Generative Grammar (1972), an enlarged edition of Language and Mind (1972), and Reflections on Language (1975). In 1974 Chomsky became a corresponding fellow of the British Academy.
Edward S. Herman and the Faurisson affair: 1976–1980
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In the late 1970s and 1980s, Chomsky's linguistic publications expanded and clarified his earlier work, addressing his critics and updating his grammatical theory. His political talks often generated considerable controversy, particularly when he criticized the Israeli government and military. In the early 1970s Chomsky began collaborating with Edward S. Herman, who had also published critiques of the U.S. war in Vietnam. Together they wrote Counter-Revolutionary Violence: Bloodbaths in Fact & Propaganda, a book that criticized U.S. military involvement in Southeast Asia and the mainstream media's failure to cover it. Warner Modular published it in 1973, but its parent company disapproved of the book's contents and ordered all copies destroyed.
While mainstream publishing options proved elusive, Chomsky found support from Michael Albert's South End Press, an activist-oriented publishing company. In 1979, South End published Chomsky and Herman's revised Counter-Revolutionary Violence as the two-volume The Political Economy of Human Rights, which compares U.S. media reactions to the Cambodian genocide and the Indonesian occupation of East Timor. It argues that because Indonesia was a U.S. ally, U.S. media ignored the East Timorese situation while focusing on events in Cambodia, a U.S. enemy. Chomsky's response included two testimonials before the United Nations' Special Committee on Decolonization, successful encouragement for American media to cover the occupation, and meetings with refugees in Lisbon. Marxist academic Steven Lukes most prominently publicly accused Chomsky of betraying his anarchist ideals and acting as an apologist for Cambodian leader Pol Pot. Herman said that the controversy "imposed a serious personal cost" on Chomsky, who considered the personal criticism less important than the evidence that "mainstream intelligentsia suppressed or justified the crimes of their own states".
Chomsky had long publicly criticized Nazism, and totalitarianism more generally, but his commitment to freedom of speech led him to defend the right of French historian Robert Faurisson to advocate a position widely characterized as Holocaust denial. Without Chomsky's knowledge, his plea for Faurisson's freedom of speech was published as the preface to the latter's 1980 book Mémoire en défense contre ceux qui m'accusent de falsifier l'histoire. Chomsky was widely condemned for defending Faurisson, and France's mainstream press accused Chomsky of being a Holocaust denier himself, refusing to publish his rebuttals to their accusations. Critiquing Chomsky's position, sociologist Werner Cohn later published an analysis of the affair titled Partners in Hate: Noam Chomsky and the Holocaust Deniers. The Faurisson affair had a lasting, damaging effect on Chomsky's career, especially in France.
Critique of propaganda and international affairs
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In 1985, during the Nicaraguan Contra War—in which the U.S. supported the contra militia against the Sandinista government—Chomsky traveled to Managua to meet with workers' organizations and refugees of the conflict, giving public lectures on politics and linguistics. Many of these lectures were published in 1987 as On Power and Ideology: The Managua Lectures. In 1983 he published The Fateful Triangle, which argued that the U.S. had continually used the Israeli–Palestinian conflict for its own ends. In 1988, Chomsky visited the Palestinian territories to witness the impact of Israeli occupation.
Chomsky and Herman's Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media (1988) outlines their propaganda model for understanding mainstream media. Even in countries without official censorship, they argued, the news is censored through five filters that greatly influence both what and how news is presented. The book received a 1992 film adaptation. In 1989, Chomsky published Necessary Illusions: Thought Control in Democratic Societies, in which he suggests that a worthwhile democracy requires that its citizens undertake intellectual self-defense against the media and elite intellectual culture that seeks to control them. By the 1980s, Chomsky's students had become prominent linguists who, in turn, expanded and revised his linguistic theories.
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In the 1990s, Chomsky embraced political activism to a greater degree than before. Retaining his commitment to the cause of East Timorese independence, in 1995 he visited Australia to talk on the issue at the behest of the East Timorese Relief Association and the National Council for East Timorese Resistance. The lectures he gave on the subject were published as Powers and Prospects in 1996. As a result of the international publicity Chomsky generated, his biographer Wolfgang Sperlich opined that he did more to aid the cause of East Timorese independence than anyone but the investigative journalist John Pilger. After East Timor attained independence from Indonesia in 1999, the Australian-led International Force for East Timor arrived as a peacekeeping force; Chomsky was critical of this, believing it was designed to secure Australian access to East Timor's oil and gas reserves under the Timor Gap Treaty.
Chomsky was widely interviewed after the September 11 attacks in 2001 as the American public attempted to make sense of the attacks. He argued that the ensuing War on Terror was not a new development but a continuation of U.S. foreign policy and concomitant rhetoric since at least the Reagan era. He gave the D.T. Lakdawala Memorial Lecture in New Delhi in 2001, and in 2003 visited Cuba at the invitation of the Latin American Association of Social Scientists. Chomsky's 2003 Hegemony or Survival articulated what he called the United States' "imperial grand strategy" and critiqued the Iraq War and other aspects of the War on Terror. Chomsky toured internationally with greater regularity during this period.
During the 2014 Scottish independence referendum, Chomsky supported Scottish independence.
Retirement
Chomsky retired from MIT in 2002, but continued to conduct research and seminars on campus as an emeritus. That same year he visited Turkey to attend the trial of a publisher who had been accused of treason for printing one of Chomsky's books; Chomsky insisted on being a co-defendant and amid international media attention, the Security Courts dropped the charge on the first day. During that trip Chomsky visited Kurdish areas of Turkey and spoke out in favor of the Kurds' human rights. A supporter of the World Social Forum, he attended its conferences in Brazil in both 2002 and 2003, also attending the Forum event in India.
Chomsky supported the 2011 Occupy movement, speaking at encampments and publishing on the movement, which he called a reaction to a 30-year class war. The 2015 documentary Requiem for the American Dream summarizes his views on capitalism and economic inequality through a "75-minute teach-in".
In 2015 Chomsky and his wife purchased a residence in São Paulo, Brazil, and began splitting their time between Brazil and the U.S. Chomsky taught a short-term politics course at the University of Arizona in 2017. He was later hired as a part-time professor in its linguistics department with duties including teaching and public seminars. His salary was covered by philanthropic donations. After a stroke in June 2023, Chomsky moved to Brazil full-time.
Linguistic theory
What started as purely linguistic research ... has led, through involvement in political causes and an identification with an older philosophic tradition, to no less than an attempt to formulate an overall theory of man. The roots of this are manifest in the linguistic theory ... The discovery of cognitive structures common to the human race but only to humans (species specific), leads quite easily to thinking of unalienable human attributes.
The basis of Chomsky's linguistic theory lies in biolinguistics, the linguistic school that holds that the principles underpinning the structure of language are biologically preset in the human mind and hence genetically inherited. He argues that all humans share the same underlying linguistic structure, irrespective of sociocultural differences. In adopting this position Chomsky rejects the radical behaviorist psychology of B. F. Skinner, who viewed speech, thought, and all behavior as a completely learned product of the interactions between organisms and their environments. Accordingly, Chomsky argues that language is a unique evolutionary development of the human species and distinguished from modes of communication used by any other animal species. Chomsky argues that his nativist, internalist view of language is consistent with the philosophical school of "rationalism" and contrasts with the anti-nativist, externalist view of language consistent with the philosophical school of "empiricism", which contends that all knowledge, including language, comes from external stimuli. Historians have disputed Chomsky's claim about rationalism on the basis that his theory of innate grammar excludes propositional knowledge and instead focuses on innate learning capacities or structures.
Universal grammar
Since the 1960s, Chomsky has maintained that syntactic knowledge is partially inborn, implying that children need only learn certain language-specific features of their native languages. He bases his argument on observations about human language acquisition and describes a "poverty of the stimulus": an enormous gap between the linguistic stimuli to which children are exposed and the rich linguistic competence they attain. For example, although children are exposed to only a very small and finite subset of the allowable syntactic variants within their first language, they somehow acquire the highly organized and systematic ability to understand and produce an infinite number of sentences, including ones that have never before been uttered, in that language. To explain this, Chomsky proposed that the primary linguistic data must be supplemented by an innate linguistic capacity. Furthermore, while a human baby and a kitten are both capable of inductive reasoning, if they are exposed to exactly the same linguistic data, the human will always acquire the ability to understand and produce language, while the kitten will never acquire either ability. Chomsky referred to this difference in capacity as the language acquisition device, and suggested that linguists needed to determine both what that device is and what constraints it imposes on the range of possible human languages. The universal features that result from these constraints would constitute "universal grammar". Multiple researchers have challenged universal grammar on the grounds of the evolutionary infeasibility of its genetic basis for language, the lack of crosslinguistic surface universals, and the unproven link between innate/universal structures and the structures of specific languages.Michael Tomasello has challenged Chomsky's theory of innate syntactic knowledge as based on theory and not behavioral observation. The empirical basis of poverty of the stimulus arguments has been challenged by Geoffrey Pullum and others, leading to back-and-forth debate in the language acquisition literature. Recent work has also suggested that some recurrent neural network architectures can learn hierarchical structure without an explicit constraint.
Generative grammar
Chomsky is generally credited with launching the research tradition of generative grammar, which aims to explain the cognitive basis of language by formulating and testing explicit models of humans' subconscious grammatical knowledge. Generative grammar proposes models of language consisting of explicit rule systems, which make testable falsifiable predictions. The goal of generative grammar is sometimes described as answering the question "What is that that you know when you know a language?"
Within generative grammar, Chomsky's initial model was called transformational grammar. Chomsky developed transformational grammar in the mid-1950s, whereupon it became the dominant syntactic theory in linguistics for two decades. "Transformations" are syntactic rules that derive surface structure from deep structure, which was often considered to reflect the structure of meaning. Transformational grammar later developed into the 1980s government and binding theory and thence into the minimalist program. This research focused on the principles and parameters framework, which explained children's ability to learn any language by filling open parameters (a set of universal grammar principles) that adapt as the child encounters linguistic data. The minimalist program, initiated by Chomsky, asks which minimal principles and parameters theory fits most elegantly, naturally, and simply.
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Chomsky is commonly credited with inventing transformational-generative grammar, but his original contribution was considered modest when he first published his theory. In his 1955 dissertation and his 1957 textbook Syntactic Structures, he presented recent developments in the analysis formulated by Zellig Harris, who was Chomsky's PhD supervisor, and by Charles F. Hockett. Their method derives from the work of the structural linguist Louis Hjelmslev, who introduced algorithmic grammar to general linguistics. Based on this rule-based notation of grammars, Chomsky grouped logically possible phrase-structure grammar types into a series of four nested subsets and increasingly complex types, together known as the Chomsky hierarchy. This classification remains relevant to formal language theory and theoretical computer science, especially programming language theory,compiler construction, and automata theory. Chomsky's Syntactic Structures became, beyond generative linguistics as such, a catalyst for connecting what in Hjelmslev's and Jespersen's time was the beginnings of structural linguistics, which has become cognitive linguistics.
Political views
The second major area to which Chomsky has contributed—and surely the best known in terms of the number of people in his audience and the ease of understanding what he writes and says—is his work on sociopolitical analysis; political, social, and economic history; and critical assessment of current political circumstance. In Chomsky's view, although those in power might—and do—try to obscure their intentions and to defend their actions in ways that make them acceptable to citizens, it is easy for anyone who is willing to be critical and consider the facts to discern what they are up to.
Chomsky is a prominent political dissident. His political views have changed little since his childhood, when he was influenced by the emphasis on political activism that was ingrained in Jewish working-class tradition. He usually identifies as an anarcho-syndicalist or a libertarian socialist. He views these positions not as precise political theories but as ideals that he thinks best meet human needs: liberty, community, and freedom of association. Unlike some other socialists, such as Marxists, Chomsky believes that politics lies outside the remit of science, but he still roots his ideas about an ideal society in empirical data and empirically justified theories.
In Chomsky's view, the truth about political realities is systematically distorted or suppressed by an elite corporatocracy, which uses corporate media, advertising, and think tanks to promote its own propaganda. His work seeks to reveal such manipulations and the truth they obscure. Chomsky believes this web of falsehood can be broken by "common sense", critical thinking, and understanding the roles of self-interest and self-deception, and that intellectuals abdicate their moral responsibility to tell the truth about the world in fear of losing prestige and funding. He argues that, as such an intellectual, it is his duty to use his social privilege, resources, and training to aid popular democracy movements in their struggles.
Although he has participated in direct action demonstrations—joining protests, being arrested, organizing groups—Chomsky's primary political outlet is education, i.e., free public lessons. He is a longtime member of the Industrial Workers of the World international union, as was his father.
United States foreign policy
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Chomsky has been a prominent critic of "American imperialism", but is not a pacifist, believing World War II was justified as America's last defensive war. He believes that U.S. foreign policy's basic principle is the establishment of "open societies" that are economically and politically controlled by the U.S. and where U.S.-based businesses can prosper. He argues that the U.S. seeks to suppress any movements within these countries that are not compliant with U.S. interests and to ensure that U.S.-friendly governments are placed in power. When discussing current events, he emphasizes their place within a wider historical perspective. He believes that official, sanctioned historical accounts of U.S. and British extraterritorial operations have consistently whitewashed these nations' actions in order to present them as having benevolent motives in either spreading democracy or, in older instances, spreading Christianity; by criticizing these accounts, he seeks to correct them. Prominent examples he regularly cites are the actions of the British Empire in India and Africa and U.S. actions in Vietnam, the Philippines, Latin America, and the Middle East.
Chomsky's political work has centered heavily on criticizing the actions of the United States. He has said he focuses on the U.S. because the country has militarily and economically dominated the world during his lifetime and because its liberal democratic electoral system allows the citizenry to influence government policy. His hope is that, by spreading awareness of the impact U.S. foreign policies have on the populations affected by them, he can sway the populations of the U.S. and other countries into opposing the policies. He urges people to criticize their governments' motivations, decisions, and actions, to accept responsibility for their own thoughts and actions, and to apply the same standards to others as to themselves.
Chomsky has been critical of U.S. involvement in the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, arguing that it has consistently blocked a peaceful settlement. He also criticizes the U.S.'s close ties with Saudi Arabia and involvement in Saudi Arabian-led intervention in Yemen, highlighting that Saudi Arabia has "one of the most grotesque human rights records in the world".
Chomsky called the Russian invasion of Ukraine a criminal act of aggression and noted that Russia was committing major war crimes in the country. He considered support for Ukraine's self-defense legitimate and said Ukraine should be given enough military aid to defend itself, but not enough to cause "an escalation". His criticism of the war focused on the United States. He alleged that the U.S. rejected any compromise with Russia and that this might have provoked the invasion. According to Chomsky, the U.S. was arming Ukraine only to weaken Russia, and Ukrainian requests for heavy weaponry were untrue "Western propaganda", despite Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky repeatedly asking for them. More than a year into the invasion, Chomsky argued that Russia was waging the war "more humanely" than the U.S. did the invasion of Iraq.
Capitalism and socialism
In his youth, Chomsky developed a dislike of capitalism and the pursuit of material wealth. At the same time, he developed a disdain for authoritarian socialism, as represented by the Marxist–Leninist policies of the Soviet Union. Rather than accepting the common view among U.S. economists that a spectrum exists between total state ownership of the economy and total private ownership, he instead suggests that a spectrum should be understood between total democratic control of the economy and total autocratic control (whether state or private). He argues that Western capitalist countries are not really democratic, because, in his view, a truly democratic society is one in which all persons have a say in public economic policy. He has stated his opposition to ruling elites, among them institutions like the IMF, World Bank, and GATT (precursor to the WTO).
Chomsky highlights that, since the 1970s, the U.S. has become increasingly economically unequal as a result of the repeal of various financial regulations and the unilateral rescinding of the Bretton Woods financial control agreement by the U.S. He characterizes the U.S. as a de facto one-party state, viewing both the Republican Party and Democratic Party as manifestations of a single "Business Party" controlled by corporate and financial interests. Chomsky highlights that, within Western capitalist liberal democracies, at least 80% of the population has no control over economic decisions, which are instead in the hands of a management class and ultimately controlled by a small, wealthy elite.
Noting the entrenchment of such an economic system, Chomsky believes that change is possible through the organized cooperation of large numbers of people who understand the problem and know how they want to reorganize the economy more equitably. Acknowledging that corporate domination of media and government stifles any significant change to this system, he sees reason for optimism in historical examples such as the social rejection of slavery as immoral, the advances in women's rights, and the forcing of government to justify invasions. He views violent revolution to overthrow a government as a last resort to be avoided if possible, citing the example of historical revolutions where the population's welfare has worsened as a result of upheaval.
Chomsky sees libertarian socialist and anarcho-syndicalist ideas as the descendants of the classical liberal ideas of the Age of Enlightenment, arguing that his ideological position revolves around "nourishing the libertarian and creative character of the human being". He envisions an anarcho-syndicalist future with direct worker control of the means of production and government by workers' councils, who would select temporary and revocable representatives to meet together at general assemblies. The point of this self-governance is to make each citizen, in Thomas Jefferson's words, "a direct participator in the government of affairs". He believes that there will be no need for political parties. By controlling their productive life, he believes that individuals can gain job satisfaction and a sense of fulfillment and purpose. He argues that unpleasant and unpopular jobs could be fully automated, specially remunerated, or communally shared.
Israeli–Palestinian conflict
Chomsky has written prolifically about the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, aiming to raise public awareness of it. A labor Zionist who later became what is today considered an anti-Zionist, Chomsky has criticized the Israeli settlements in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, which he likens to a settler colony. He has said that the 1947 United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine was a bad decision, but given the realpolitik of the situation, he has also considered a two-state solution on the condition that the nation-states exist on equal terms.
Chomsky has said that characterizing Israel's treatment of the Palestinians as apartheid, similar to the system that existed in South Africa, would be a "gift to Israel", as he has long held that "the Occupied Territories are much worse than South Africa". South Africa depended on its black population for labor, but Chomsky argues the same is not true of Israel, which in his view seeks to make the situation for Palestinians under its occupation unlivable, especially in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, where "atrocities" take place every day. He also argues that, unlike South Africa, Israel has not sought the international community's approval, but rather relies solely on U.S. support. Chomsky has said that the Israeli-led blockade of the Gaza Strip has turned it into a "concentration camp" and expressed fears similar to Israeli intellectual Yeshayahu Leibowitz's 1990s warning that the continued occupation of the Palestinian territories could turn Israeli Jews into "Judeo-Nazis". Chomsky has said that Leibowitz's warning "was a direct reflection of the continued occupation, the humiliation of people, the degradation, and the terrorist attacks by the Israeli government". He has also called the U.S. a violent state that exports violence by supporting Israeli "atrocities" against the Palestinians and said that listening to American mainstream media, including CBS, is like listening to "Israeli propaganda agencies".
Chomsky was denied entry to the West Bank in 2010 because of his criticisms of Israel. He had been invited to deliver a lecture at Bir Zeit University and was to meet with Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad. An Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman later said that Chomsky was denied entry by mistake.
In his 1983 book The Fateful Triangle, Chomsky criticized the Palestine Liberation Organization for its "self-destructiveness" and "suicidal character" and disapproved of its programs of "armed struggle" and "erratic violence". He also criticized the Arab governments as not "decent". Given what he has described as his very Jewish upbringing with deeply Zionist activist parents, Chomsky's views have drawn controversy and criticism. They are rooted in the kibbutzim and socialist binational cooperation. In a 2014 interview on Democracy Now!, Chomsky said that the charter of Hamas, which calls for Israel's destruction, "means practically nothing", having been created "by a small group of people under siege, under attack in 1988". He compared it to the electoral program of the Likud party, which, he said, "states explicitly that there can never be a Palestinian state west of the Jordan River. And they not only state it in their charter, that's a call for the destruction of Palestine, explicit call for it".
Mass media and propaganda
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Chomsky's political writings have largely focused on ideology, social and political power, mass media, and state policy. One of his best-known works, Manufacturing Consent, dissects the media's role in reinforcing and acquiescing to state policies across the political spectrum while marginalizing contrary perspectives. Chomsky asserts that this version of censorship, by government-guided "free market" forces, is subtler and harder to undermine than was the equivalent propaganda system in the Soviet Union. As he argues, the mainstream press is corporate-owned and thus reflects corporate priorities and interests. Acknowledging that many American journalists are dedicated and well-meaning, he argues that the mass media's choices of topics and issues, the unquestioned premises on which that coverage rests, and the range of opinions expressed are all constrained to reinforce the state's ideology: although mass media will criticize individual politicians and political parties, it will not undermine the wider state-corporate nexus of which it is a part. As evidence, he highlights that the U.S. mass media does not employ any socialist journalists or political commentators. He also points to examples of important news stories that the U.S. mainstream media has ignored because reporting on them would reflect badly upon the country, including the murder of Black Panther Fred Hampton with possible FBI involvement, the massacres in Nicaragua perpetrated by U.S.-funded Contras, and the constant reporting on Israeli deaths without equivalent coverage of the far larger number of Palestinian deaths in that conflict. To remedy this situation, Chomsky calls for grassroots democratic control and involvement of the media.
Chomsky considers most conspiracy theories fruitless, distracting substitutes for thinking about policy formation in an institutional framework, where individual manipulation is secondary to broader social imperatives. He separates his Propaganda Model from conspiracy in that he is describing institutions following their natural imperatives rather than collusive forces with secret controls. Instead of supporting the educational system as an antidote, he believes that most education is counterproductive. Chomsky describes mass education as a system solely intended to turn farmers from independent producers into unthinking industrial employees.
Reactions of critics and counter-criticism: 1980s–present
In the 2004 book The Anti-Chomsky Reader, Peter Collier and David Horowitz accuse Chomsky of cherry-picking facts to suit his theories. Horowitz has also criticized Chomsky's anti-Americanism:
For 40 years Noam Chomsky has turned out book after book, pamphlet after pamphlet and speech after speech with one message, and one message alone: America is the Great Satan; it is the fount of evil in the world. In Chomsky's demented universe, America is responsible not only for its own bad deeds, but for the bad deeds of others, including those of the terrorists who struck the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. In this attitude he is the medium for all those who now search the ruins of Manhattan not for the victims and the American dead, but for the "root causes" of the catastrophe that befell them.
For the conservative public policy think tank the Hoover Institution, Peter Schweizer wrote in January 2006, "Chomsky favors the estate tax and massive income redistribution—just not the redistribution of his income." Schweizer criticized Chomsky for setting up an estate plan and protecting his own intellectual property as it relates to his published works, as well as the high speaking fees that Chomsky received on a regular basis, around $9,000–$12,000 per talk at that time.
Chomsky has been accused of treating socialist or communist regimes with credulity and examining capitalist regimes with greater scrutiny or criticism:
Chomsky's analysis of U.S. actions plunged deep into dark U.S. machinations, but when traveling among the Communists he rested content with appearances. The countryside outside Hanoi, he reported in The New York Review of Books, displayed "a high degree of democratic participation at the village and regional levels." But how could he tell? Chomsky did not speak Vietnamese, and so he depended on government translators, tour guides, and handlers for information. In [Communist] Vietnamese hands, the clear-eyed skepticism turned into willing credulousness.
According to Nikolas Kozloff, writing for Al Jazeera in September 2012, Chomsky "has drawn the world's attention to the various misdeeds of the US and its proxies around the world, and for that he deserves credit. Yet, in seeking to avoid controversy at all costs Chomsky has turned into something of an ideologue. Scour the Chomsky web site and you won't find significant discussion of Belarus or Latin America's flirtation with outside authoritarian leaders, for that matter."
Political activist George Monbiot has argued that "Part of the problem is that a kind of cult has developed around Noam Chomsky and John Pilger, which cannot believe they could ever be wrong, and produces ever more elaborate conspiracy theories to justify their mistakes."
Anarchist and primitivist John Zerzan has accused Chomsky of not being a real anarchist, saying that he is instead "a liberal-leftist politically, and downright reactionary in his academic specialty, linguistic theory. Chomsky is also, by all accounts, a generous, sincere, tireless activist—which does not, unfortunately, ensure his thinking has liberatory value."
Defenders of Chomsky have countered that he has been censored or left out of public debate. Claims of this nature date to the Reagan era. Writing for The Washington Post in February 1988, Saul Landau wrote, "It is unhealthy that Chomsky's insights are excluded from the policy debate. His relentless prosecutorial prose, with a hint of Talmudic whine and the rationalist anarchism of Tom Paine, may reflect a justified frustration."
Philosophy
Chomsky has also been active in a number of philosophical fields, including philosophy of mind, philosophy of language, and philosophy of science. In these fields he is credited with ushering in the "cognitive revolution", a significant paradigm shift that rejected logical positivism, the prevailing philosophical methodology of the time, and reframed how philosophers think about language and the mind. Chomsky views the cognitive revolution as rooted in 17th-century rationalist ideals. His position—the idea that the mind contains inherent structures to understand language, perception, and thought—has more in common with rationalism than behaviorism. He named one of his key works Cartesian Linguistics: A Chapter in the History of Rationalist Thought (1966). This sparked criticism from historians and philosophers who disagreed with Chomsky's interpretations of classical sources and use of philosophical terminology. In the philosophy of language, Chomsky is particularly known for his criticisms of the notion of reference and meaning in human language and his perspective on the nature and function of mental representations.
Chomsky's famous 1971 debate on human nature with the French philosopher Michel Foucault was a symbolic clash of the analytic and continental philosophy traditions, represented by Chomsky and Foucault, respectively. It showed what appeared to be irreconcilable differences between two moral and intellectual luminaries of the 20th century. Foucault held that any definition of human nature is connected to our present-day conceptions of ourselves; Chomsky held that human nature contained universals such as a common standard of moral justice as deduced through reason. Chomsky criticized postmodernism and French philosophy generally, arguing that the obscure language of postmodern, leftist philosophers gives little aid to the working classes. He has also debated analytic philosophers, including Tyler Burge, Donald Davidson, Michael Dummett, Saul Kripke, Thomas Nagel, Hilary Putnam, Willard Van Orman Quine, and John Searle.
Chomsky's contributions span intellectual and world history, including the history of philosophy. Irony is a recurring characteristic of his writing, such as rhetorically implying that his readers already know something to be true, which engages the reader more actively in assessing the veracity of his claims.
Personal life
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Chomsky endeavors to separate his family life, linguistic scholarship, and political activism from each other. An intensely private person, he is uninterested in appearances and the fame his work has brought him. McGilvray suggests that Chomsky is not motivated by a desire for fame, but impelled to tell what he perceives as the truth and a desire to aid others in doing so. Chomsky acknowledges that his income affords him a privileged life compared to the majority of the world's population; nevertheless, he characterizes himself as a "worker", albeit one who uses his intellect as his employable skill. He reads four or five newspapers daily; in the U.S., he subscribes to The Boston Globe, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, and The Christian Science Monitor. Chomsky is not religious but has expressed approval of forms of religion such as liberation theology.
Chomsky is known to use charged language ("corrupt", "fascist", "fraudulent") when describing established political and academic figures, which can polarize his audience but is in keeping with his belief that much scholarship is self-serving. His colleague Steven Pinker has said that Chomsky "portrays people who disagree with him as stupid or evil, using withering scorn in his rhetoric", and that this contributes to the extreme reactions he receives. Chomsky avoids academic conferences, including left-oriented ones such as the Socialist Scholars Conference, preferring to speak to activist groups or hold university seminars for mass audiences. His approach to academic freedom has led him to support MIT academics whose actions he deplores; in 1969, when Chomsky heard that Walt Rostow, a major architect of the Vietnam war, wanted to return to work at MIT, Chomsky threatened "to protest publicly" if Rostow were denied a position at MIT. In 1989, when Pentagon adviser John Deutch applied to be president of MIT, Chomsky supported his candidacy. Later, when Deutch became head of the CIA, The New York Times quoted Chomsky as saying, "He has more honesty and integrity than anyone I've ever met. ... If somebody's got to be running the CIA, I'm glad it's him."
Chomsky was married to Carol Doris (née Schatz) from 1949 until her death in 2008. They had three children together: Aviva (b. 1957), Diane (b. 1960), and Harry (b. 1967). In 2014, Chomsky married Valeria Wasserman. They have owned a home in Wasserman's native country, Brazil, since 2015.
In 2023, Chomsky suffered a massive stroke and was flown to a hospital in São Paulo, Brazil, to recuperate. He can no longer walk or communicate, making his return to public life improbable, but he continues to follow current events such as the Israel–Hamas war. He was discharged in June 2024 to continue his recovery at home. The same month, Chomsky trended on social media amid false reports of his death. Periodicals retracted premature obituaries.
Reception and influence
[Chomsky's] voice is heard in academia beyond linguistics and philosophy: from computer science to neuroscience, from anthropology to education, mathematics and literary criticism. If we include Chomsky's political activism then the boundaries become quite blurred, and it comes as no surprise that Chomsky is increasingly seen as enemy number one by those who inhabit that wide sphere of reactionary discourse and action.
Chomsky has been a defining Western intellectual figure, central to the field of linguistics and definitive in cognitive science, computer science, philosophy, and psychology. In addition to being known as one of the most important intellectuals of his time, Chomsky has a dual legacy as a leader and luminary in both linguistics and the realm of political dissent. Despite his academic success, his political viewpoints and activism have resulted in his being distrusted by mainstream media, and he is regarded as being "on the outer margin of acceptability". Chomsky's public image and social reputation often color his work's public reception.
In academia
McGilvray observes that Chomsky inaugurated the "cognitive revolution" in linguistics, and that he is largely responsible for establishing the field as a formal, natural science, moving it away from the procedural form of structural linguistics dominant during the mid-20th century. As such, some have called Chomsky "the father of modern linguistics". Linguist John Lyons further remarked that within a few decades of publication, Chomskyan linguistics had become "the most dynamic and influential" school of thought in the field. By the 1970s his work had also come to exert a considerable influence on philosophy, and a Minnesota State University Moorhead poll ranked Syntactic Structures as the single most important work in cognitive science. In addition, his work in automata theory and the Chomsky hierarchy have become well known in computer science, and he is much cited in computational linguistics.
Chomsky's criticisms of behaviorism contributed substantially to the decline of behaviorist psychology; in addition, he is generally regarded as one of the primary founders of the field of cognitive science. Some arguments in evolutionary psychology are derived from his research results;Nim Chimpsky, a chimpanzee who was the subject of a study in animal language acquisition at Columbia University, was named after Chomsky in reference to his view of language acquisition as a uniquely human ability.
ACM Turing Award winner Donald Knuth credited Chomsky's work with helping him combine his interests in mathematics, linguistics, and computer science.IBM computer scientist John Backus, another Turing Award winner, used some of Chomsky's concepts to help him develop FORTRAN, the first widely used high-level computer programming language. Chomsky's theory of generative grammar has also influenced work in music theory and analysis, such as Fred Lerdahl's and Ray Jackendoff's generative theory of tonal music.
Chomsky is among the most cited authors living or dead. He was cited within the Arts and Humanities Citation Index more often than any other living scholar from 1980 to 1992. Chomsky was also extensively cited in the Social Sciences Citation Index and Science Citation Index during the same period. The librarian who conducted the research said that the statistics show that "he is very widely read across disciplines and that his work is used by researchers across disciplines ... it seems that you can't write a paper without citing Noam Chomsky." As a result of his influence, there are dueling camps of Chomskyan and non-Chomskyan linguistics. Their disputes are often acrimonious. Additionally, according to journalist Maya Jaggi, Chomsky is among the most quoted sources in the humanities, ranking alongside Marx, Shakespeare and the Bible.
In politics
Chomsky's status as the "most-quoted living author" is credited to his political writings, which vastly outnumber his writings on linguistics. Chomsky biographer Wolfgang B. Sperlich characterizes him as "one of the most notable contemporary champions of the people"; journalist John Pilger has described him as a "genuine people's hero; an inspiration for struggles all over the world for that basic decency known as freedom. To a lot of people in the margins—activists and movements—he's unfailingly supportive."Arundhati Roy has called him "one of the greatest, most radical public thinkers of our time", and Edward Said thought him "one of the most significant challengers of unjust power and delusions".Fred Halliday has said that by the start of the 21st century Chomsky had become a "guru" for the world's anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist movements. The propaganda model of media criticism that he and Herman developed has been widely accepted in radical media critiques and adopted to some level in mainstream criticism of the media, also exerting a significant influence on the growth of alternative media, including radio, publishers, and the Internet, which in turn have helped to disseminate his work.
Despite this broad influence, university departments devoted to history and political science rarely include Chomsky's work on their undergraduate syllabi. Critics have argued that despite publishing widely on social and political issues, Chomsky has no formal expertise in these areas; he has responded that such issues are not as complex as many social scientists claim and that almost everyone is able to comprehend them regardless of whether they have been academically trained to do so. Some have responded to these criticisms by questioning the critics' motives and their understanding of Chomsky's ideas. Sperlich, for instance, says that Chomsky has been vilified by corporate interests, particularly in the mainstream press. Likewise, according to McGilvray, many of Chomsky's critics "do not bother quoting his work or quote out of context, distort, and create straw men that cannot be supported by Chomsky's text".
Chomsky drew criticism for not calling the Bosnian War's Srebrenica massacre a "genocide". While he did not deny the fact of the massacre, which he called "a horror story and major crime", he felt the massacre did not meet the definition of genocide. Critics have accused Chomsky of denying the Bosnian genocide.
Chomsky's far-reaching criticisms of U.S. foreign policy and the legitimacy of U.S. power have raised controversy. A document obtained pursuant to a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request from the U.S. government revealed that the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) monitored his activities and for years denied doing so. The CIA also destroyed its files on Chomsky at some point, possibly in violation of federal law. He has often received undercover police protection at MIT and when speaking on the Middle East but has refused uniformed police protection. German news magazine Der Spiegel described Chomsky as "the Ayatollah of anti-American hatred", while American conservative commentator David Horowitz called him "the most devious, the most dishonest and ... the most treacherous intellect in America", whose work is infused with "anti-American dementia" and evidences his "pathological hatred of his own country". Writing in Commentary magazine, the journalist Jonathan Kay described Chomsky as "a hard-boiled anti-American monomaniac who simply refuses to believe anything that any American leader says".
Chomsky's criticism of Israel has led to his being called a traitor to the Jewish people and an anti-Semite. Criticizing Chomsky's defense of the right of individuals to engage in Holocaust denial on the grounds that freedom of speech must be extended to all viewpoints, Werner Cohn called Chomsky "the most important patron" of the neo-Nazi movement. The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) called him a Holocaust denier, describing him as a "dupe of intellectual pride so overweening that he is incapable of making distinctions between totalitarian and democratic societies, between oppressors and victims". In turn, Chomsky has claimed that the ADL is dominated by "Stalinist types" who oppose democracy in Israel. The lawyer Alan Dershowitz has called Chomsky a "false prophet of the left"; Chomsky called Dershowitz "a complete liar" who is on "a crazed jihad, dedicating much of his life to trying to destroy my reputation". In early 2016, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan of Turkey publicly rebuked Chomsky after he signed an open letter condemning Erdoğan for his anti-Kurdish repression and double standards on terrorism. Chomsky accused Erdoğan of hypocrisy, noting that Erdoğan supports al-Qaeda's Syrian affiliate, the al-Nusra Front.
Academic achievements, awards, and honors
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In 1970, the London Times named Chomsky one of the "makers of the twentieth century". He was voted the world's leading public intellectual in The 2005 Global Intellectuals Poll jointly conducted by American magazine Foreign Policy and British magazine Prospect.New Statesman readers listed Chomsky among the world's foremost heroes in 2006. In 2011, the US Peace Memorial Foundation awarded The US Peace Prize to Chomsky “[w]hose antiwar activities for five decades both educate and inspire.”
In the United States he is a Member of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Linguistic Society of America, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Philosophical Association, and the American Philosophical Society. Abroad he is a corresponding fellow of the British Academy, an honorary member of the British Psychological Society, a member of the Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher Leopoldina, and a foreign member of the Department of Social Sciences of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. He received a 1971 Guggenheim Fellowship, the 1984 American Psychological Association Award for Distinguished Contributions to Psychology, the 1988 Kyoto Prize in Basic Sciences, the 1996 Helmholtz Medal, the 1999 Benjamin Franklin Medal in Computer and Cognitive Science, the 2010 Erich Fromm Prize, and the British Academy's 2014 Neil and Saras Smith Medal for Linguistics. He is also a two-time winner of the NCTE George Orwell Award for Distinguished Contribution to Honesty and Clarity in Public Language (1987 and 1989). He has also received the Rabindranath Tagore Centenary Award from The Asiatic Society.
Chomsky received the 2004 Carl-von-Ossietzky Prize from the city of Oldenburg, Germany, to acknowledge his body of work as a political analyst and media critic. He received an honorary fellowship in 2005 from the Literary and Historical Society of University College Dublin. He received the 2008 President's Medal from the Literary and Debating Society of the National University of Ireland, Galway. Since 2009, he has been an honorary member of International Association of Professional Translators and Interpreters (IAPTI). He received the University of Wisconsin's A.E. Havens Center's Award for Lifetime Contribution to Critical Scholarship and was inducted into IEEE Intelligent Systems' AI's Hall of Fame for "significant contributions to the field of AI and intelligent systems." Chomsky has an Erdős number of four.
In 2011, the US Peace Memorial Foundation awarded Chomsky the US Peace Prize for anti-war activities over five decades. For his work in human rights, peace, and social criticism, he received the 2011 Sydney Peace Prize, the Sretenje Order in 2015, the 2017 Seán MacBride Peace Prize and the Dorothy Eldridge Peacemaker Award.
Chomsky has received honorary doctorates from institutions including the University of London and the University of Chicago (1967), Loyola University Chicago and Swarthmore College (1970), Bard College (1971), Delhi University (1972), the University of Massachusetts (1973), and the International School for Advanced Studies (2012). Public lectures given by Chomsky include the 1969 John Locke Lectures, 1975 Whidden Lectures, 1977 Huizinga Lecture, and 1988 Massey Lectures.
Various tributes to Chomsky have been dedicated over the years. He is the eponym for a bee species,a frog species, an asteroid, and a building complex at the Indian university Jamia Millia Islamia. Actor Viggo Mortensen and avant-garde guitarist Buckethead dedicated their 2003 album Pandemoniumfromamerica to Chomsky.
Selected bibliography
Linguistics
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See also
- Anarchism in the United States
- American philosophy
- List of linguists
- List of peace activists
- List of pioneers in computer science
- Theory of language
Notes
- Pronounced /noʊm ˈtʃɒmski/ nohm CHOM-skee
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- Fox 1998: "Mr. Chomsky ... is the father of modern linguistics and remains the field's most influential practitioner."
- Tymoczko & Henle 2004, p. 101: "As the founder of modern linguistics, Noam Chomsky, observed, each of the following sequences of words is nonsense ..."
- Tanenhaus 2016: "At 87, Noam Chomsky, the founder of modern linguistics, remains a vital presence in American intellectual life."
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- Smith 2004, pp. 107 "Chomsky's early work was renowned for its mathematical rigor and he made some contribution to the nascent discipline of mathematical linguistics, in particular the analysis of (formal) languages in terms of what is now known as the Chomsky hierarchy."
- Koerner 1983, pp. 159: "Characteristically, Harris proposes a transfer of sentences from English to Modern Hebrew ... Chomsky's approach to syntax in Syntactic Structures and several years thereafter was not much different from Harris's approach, since the concept of 'deep' or 'underlying structure' had not yet been introduced. The main difference between Harris (1954) and Chomsky (1957) appears to be that the latter is dealing with transfers within one single language only"
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- Koerner 1978, pp. 41f: "it is worth noting that Chomsky cites Hjelmslev's Prolegomena, which had been translated into English in 1953, since the authors' theoretical argument, derived largely from logic and mathematics, exhibits noticeable similarities."
- Seuren 1998, pp. 166: "Both Hjelmslev and Harris were inspired by the mathematical notion of an algorithm as a purely formal production system for a set of strings of symbols. ... it is probably accurate to say that Hjelmslev was the first to try and apply it to the generation of strings of symbols in natural language"
- Hjelmslev 1969 Prolegomena to a Theory of Language. Danish original 1943; first English translation 1954.
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- Macintyre 2010
- Burris 2013: "Noam Chomsky has built his entire reputation as a political dissident on his command of the facts."
- McNeill 2014: "[Chomsky is] often dubbed one of the world's most important intellectuals and its leading public dissident ..."
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- Hamans & Seuren 2010, p. 377: "Having achieved a unique position of supremacy in the theory of syntax and having exploited that position far beyond the narrow circles of professional syntacticians, he felt the need to shore up his theory with the authority of history. It is shown that this attempt, resulting mainly in his Cartesian Linguistics of 1966, was widely, and rightly, judged to be a radical failure"
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- McNeill 2014: "[Chomsky is] often dubbed one of the world's most important intellectuals ..."
- Campbell 2005: "Noam Chomsky, the linguistics professor who has become one of the most outspoken critics of US foreign policy, has won a poll that names him as the world's top public intellectual."
- Robinson 1979: "Judged in terms of the power, range, novelty and influence of his thought, Noam Chomsky is arguably the most important intellectual alive today."
- Flint 1995: "The man once called the most important intellectual alive keeps his office in ... the campus of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology."
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- Knight 2016, p. 2: "In 1992, the Arts and Humanities Citation Index ranked him as the most cited person alive (the Index's top ten being Marx, Lenin, Shakespeare, Aristotle, the Bible, Plato, Freud, Chomsky, Hegel and Cicero)."
- Babe 2015, p. xvii: "[Chomsky] was the most cited living scholar between 1980 and 1992 (according to the Arts and Humanities Citation Index)."
References
- Chomsky 1991, p. 50.
- Sperlich 2006, pp. 44–45.
- Slife 1993, p. 115.
- Barsky 1997, p. 58.
- Antony & Hornstein 2003, p. 295.
- Chomsky 2016.
- Harbord 1994, p. 487.
- Barsky 2007, p. 107.
- Smith 2004, p. 185.
- Amid the Philosophers.
- Persson & LaFollette 2013.
- Prickett 2002, p. 234.
- Searle 1972.
- Adams 2003.
- Gould 1981.
- "Kyle Kulinski Speaks, the Bernie Bros Listen". Archived from the original on March 5, 2020. Retrieved February 9, 2022.
- Keller 2007.
- Swartz 2006.
- "Noam Chomsky: Israel's Actions in Palestine are "Much Worse Than Apartheid" in South Africa". Democracy Now!.
- Lyons 1978, p. xv; Barsky 1997, p. 9; McGilvray 2014, p. 3.
- Barsky 1997, pp. 9–10; Sperlich 2006, p. 11.
- Barsky 1997, p. 9.
- Barsky 1997, p. 11.
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Avram Noam Chomsky born December 7 1928 is an American professor and public intellectual known for his work in linguistics political activism and social criticism Sometimes called the father of modern linguistics Chomsky is also a major figure in analytic philosophy and one of the founders of the field of cognitive science He is a laureate professor of linguistics at the University of Arizona and an institute professor emeritus at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT Among the most cited living authors Chomsky has written more than 150 books on topics such as linguistics war and politics In addition to his work in linguistics since the 1960s Chomsky has been an influential voice on the American left as a consistent critic of U S foreign policy contemporary capitalism and corporate influence on political institutions and the media Noam ChomskyChomsky in 2017BornAvram Noam Chomsky 1928 12 07 December 7 1928 age 96 Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S SpousesCarol Schatz m 1949 died 2008 wbr Valeria Wasserman m 2014 wbr Children3 including AvivaFatherWilliam ChomskyAwards Guggenheim Fellowship 1971 Member of the National Academy of Sciences 1972 APA Award for Distinguished Scientific Contributions to Psychology 1984 Orwell Award 1987 1989 Kyoto Prize in Basic Sciences 1988 Helmholtz Medal 1996 Benjamin Franklin Medal in Computer and Cognitive Science 1999 Sydney Peace Prize 2011 Nuclear Age Peace Foundation 2014 Academic backgroundEducationUniversity of Pennsylvania BA MA PhD ThesisTransformational Analysis 1955 Doctoral advisorZellig HarrisInfluences Academic J L Austin William Chomsky C West Churchman Rene Descartes Galileo Nelson Goodman Morris Halle Zellig Harris Wilhelm von Humboldt David Hume Roman Jakobson Immanuel Kant George Armitage Miller Paṇini Hilary Putnam W V O Quine Bertrand Russell Ferdinand de Saussure Marcel Paul Schutzenberger Alan Turing Ludwig Wittgenstein Political Mikhail Bakunin Alex Carey William Chomsky John Dewey Zellig Harris Wilhelm von Humboldt David Hume Thomas Jefferson Karl Korsch Peter Kropotkin Karl Liebknecht Rosa Luxemburg John Locke Dwight Macdonald Paul Mattick John Stuart Mill George Orwell Anton Pannekoek Pierre Joseph Proudhon Rudolf Rocker Jean Jacques Rousseau Bertrand Russell Diego Abad de Santillan Adam SmithAcademic workDisciplineLinguistics analytic philosophy cognitive science political criticismSchool or traditionAnarcho syndicalism libertarian socialismInstitutionsMassachusetts Institute of Technology 1955 present Institute for Advanced Study 1958 1959 University of Arizona 2017 present Doctoral students Gulsat Aygen Mark Baker Jonathan Bobaljik Joan Bresnan Peter Culicover Ray C Dougherty Janet Dean Fodor John Goldsmith C T James Huang Sabine Iatridou Ray Jackendoff Edward Klima Jan Koster Jaklin Kornfilt S Y Kuroda Howard Lasnik Robert Lees Alec Marantz Diane Massam James D McCawley Jacques Mehler Andrea Moro Barbara Partee David Perlmutter David Pesetsky Tanya Reinhart John R Ross Ivan Sag Edwin S WilliamsInfluenced In academia John Backus Derek Bickerton Julian C Boyd Daniel Dennett Daniel Everett Jerry Fodor Gilbert Harman Marc Hauser Norbert Hornstein Niels Kaj Jerne Donald Knuth Georges J F Kohler Peter Ludlow Colin McGinn Cesar Milstein Steven Pinker John Searle Neil Smith Crispin Wright In politics Michael Albert Julian Assange Bono Jean Bricmont Hugo Chavez Zack de la Rocha Clinton Fernandes Norman Finkelstein Robert Fisk Amy Goodman Stephen Jay Gould Glenn Greenwald Christopher Hitchens Naomi Klein Kyle Kulinski Michael Moore John Nichols Ann Nocenti John Pilger Harold Pinter Arundhati Roy Edward Said Aaron SwartzWebsitechomsky wbr infoSignature Born to Ashkenazi Jewish immigrants in Philadelphia Chomsky developed an early interest in anarchism from alternative bookstores in New York City He studied at the University of Pennsylvania During his postgraduate work in the Harvard Society of Fellows Chomsky developed the theory of transformational grammar for which he earned his doctorate in 1955 That year he began teaching at MIT and in 1957 emerged as a significant figure in linguistics with his landmark work Syntactic Structures which played a major role in remodeling the study of language From 1958 to 1959 Chomsky was a National Science Foundation fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study He created or co created the universal grammar theory the generative grammar theory the Chomsky hierarchy and the minimalist program Chomsky also played a pivotal role in the decline of linguistic behaviorism and was particularly critical of the work of B F Skinner An outspoken opponent of U S involvement in the Vietnam War which he saw as an act of American imperialism in 1967 Chomsky rose to national attention for his anti war essay The Responsibility of Intellectuals Becoming associated with the New Left he was arrested multiple times for his activism and placed on President Richard Nixon s list of political opponents While expanding his work in linguistics over subsequent decades he also became involved in the linguistics wars In collaboration with Edward S Herman Chomsky later articulated the propaganda model of media criticism in Manufacturing Consent and worked to expose the Indonesian occupation of East Timor His defense of unconditional freedom of speech including that of Holocaust denial generated significant controversy in the Faurisson affair of the 1980s Chomsky s commentary on the Cambodian genocide and the Bosnian genocide also generated controversy Since retiring from active teaching at MIT he has continued his vocal political activism including opposing the 2003 invasion of Iraq and supporting the Occupy movement An anti Zionist Chomsky considers Israel s treatment of Palestinians to be worse than South African style apartheid and criticizes U S support for Israel Chomsky is widely recognized as having helped to spark the cognitive revolution in the human sciences contributing to the development of a new cognitivistic framework for the study of language and the mind Chomsky remains a leading critic of U S foreign policy contemporary capitalism U S involvement and Israel s role in the Israeli Palestinian conflict and mass media Chomsky and his ideas remain highly influential in the anti capitalist and anti imperialist movements Since 2017 he has been Agnese Nelms Haury Chair in the Agnese Nelms Haury Program in Environment and Social Justice at the University of Arizona LifeChildhood 1928 1945 Chomsky was born on December 7 1928 in the East Oak Lane neighborhood of Philadelphia Pennsylvania His parents William Chomsky and Elsie Simonofsky were Jewish immigrants William had fled the Russian Empire in 1913 to escape conscription and worked in Baltimore sweatshops and Hebrew elementary schools before attending university After moving to Philadelphia William became principal of the Congregation Mikveh Israel religious school and joined the Gratz College faculty He placed great emphasis on educating people so that they would be well integrated free and independent in their thinking concerned about improving and enhancing the world and eager to participate in making life more meaningful and worthwhile for all a mission that shaped and was subsequently adopted by his son Elsie who also taught at Mikveh Israel shared her leftist politics and care for social issues with her sons Noam s only sibling David Eli Chomsky 1934 2021 was born five years later and worked as a cardiologist in Philadelphia The brothers were close though David was more easygoing while Noam could be very competitive They were raised Jewish being taught Hebrew and regularly involved with discussing the political theories of Zionism the family was particularly influenced by the Left Zionist writings of Ahad Ha am He faced antisemitism as a child particularly from Philadelphia s Irish and German communities Chomsky attended the independent Deweyite Oak Lane Country Day School and Philadelphia s Central High School where he excelled academically and joined various clubs and societies but was troubled by the school s hierarchical and domineering teaching methods He also attended Hebrew High School at Gratz College where his father taught Chomsky has described his parents as normal Roosevelt Democrats with center left politics but relatives involved in the International Ladies Garment Workers Union exposed him to socialism and far left politics He was substantially influenced by his uncle and the Jewish leftists who frequented his New York City newspaper stand to debate current affairs Chomsky himself often visited left wing and anarchist bookstores when visiting his uncle in the city voraciously reading political literature He became absorbed in the story of the 1939 fall of Barcelona and suppression of the Spanish anarchosyndicalist movement writing his first article on the topic at the age of 10 That he came to identify with anarchism first rather than another leftist movement he described as a lucky accident Chomsky was firmly anti Bolshevik by his early teens University 1945 1955 Carol Schatz married Chomsky in 1949 In 1945 at the age of 16 Chomsky began a general program of study at the University of Pennsylvania where he explored philosophy logic and languages and developed a primary interest in learning Arabic Living at home he funded his undergraduate degree by teaching Hebrew Frustrated with his experiences at the university he considered dropping out and moving to a kibbutz in Mandatory Palestine but his intellectual curiosity was reawakened through conversations with the linguist Zellig Harris whom he first met in a political circle in 1947 Harris introduced Chomsky to the field of theoretical linguistics and convinced him to major in the subject Chomsky s BA honors thesis Morphophonemics of Modern Hebrew applied Harris s methods to the language Chomsky revised this thesis for his MA which he received from the University of Pennsylvania in 1951 it was subsequently published as a book He also developed his interest in philosophy while at university in particular under the tutelage of Nelson Goodman From 1951 to 1955 Chomsky was a member of the Society of Fellows at Harvard University where he undertook research on what became his doctoral dissertation Having been encouraged by Goodman to apply Chomsky was attracted to Harvard in part because the philosopher Willard Van Orman Quine was based there Both Quine and a visiting philosopher J L Austin of the University of Oxford strongly influenced Chomsky In 1952 Chomsky published his first academic article in The Journal of Symbolic Logic Highly critical of the established behaviorist currents in linguistics in 1954 he presented his ideas at lectures at the University of Chicago and Yale University He had not been registered as a student at Pennsylvania for four years but in 1955 he submitted a thesis setting out his ideas on transformational grammar he was awarded a Doctor of Philosophy degree for it and it was privately distributed among specialists on microfilm before being published in 1975 as part of The Logical Structure of Linguistic Theory Harvard professor George Armitage Miller was impressed by Chomsky s thesis and collaborated with him on several technical papers in mathematical linguistics Chomsky s doctorate exempted him from compulsory military service which was otherwise due to begin in 1955 In 1947 Chomsky began a romantic relationship with Carol Doris Schatz whom he had known since early childhood They married in 1949 After Chomsky was made a Fellow at Harvard the couple moved to the Allston area of Boston and remained there until 1965 when they relocated to the suburb of Lexington The couple took a Harvard travel grant to Europe in 1953 He enjoyed living in Hashomer Hatzair s HaZore a kibbutz while in Israel but was appalled by his interactions with Jewish nationalism anti Arab racism and within the kibbutz s leftist community Stalinism On visits to New York City Chomsky continued to frequent the office of the Yiddish anarchist journal Fraye Arbeter Shtime and became enamored with the ideas of Rudolf Rocker a contributor whose work introduced Chomsky to the link between anarchism and classical liberalism Chomsky also read other political thinkers the anarchists Mikhail Bakunin and Diego Abad de Santillan democratic socialists George Orwell Bertrand Russell and Dwight Macdonald and works by Marxists Karl Liebknecht Karl Korsch and Rosa Luxemburg His politics were reaffirmed by Orwell s depiction of Barcelona s functioning anarchist society in Homage to Catalonia 1938 Chomsky read the leftist journal Politics which furthered his interest in anarchism and the council communist periodical Living Marxism though he rejected the Marxist orthodoxy of its editor Paul Mattick Early career 1955 1966 Chomsky befriended two linguists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT Morris Halle and Roman Jakobson the latter of whom secured him an assistant professor position there in 1955 At MIT Chomsky spent half his time on a mechanical translation project and half teaching a course on linguistics and philosophy He described MIT as open to experimentation where he was free to pursue his idiosyncratic interests MIT promoted him to the position of associate professor in 1957 and over the next year he was also a visiting professor at Columbia University The Chomskys had their first child Aviva that same year He also published his first book on linguistics Syntactic Structures a work that radically opposed the dominant Harris Bloomfield trend in the field Responses to Chomsky s ideas ranged from indifference to hostility and his work proved divisive and caused significant upheaval in the discipline The linguist John Lyons later asserted that Syntactic Structures revolutionized the scientific study of language From 1958 to 1959 Chomsky was a National Science Foundation fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton New Jersey The Great Dome at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT Chomsky began working at MIT in 1955 Chomsky s provocative critique of B F Skinner who viewed language as learned behavior and its challenge to the dominant behaviorist paradigm thrust Chomsky into the limelight Chomsky argued that behaviorism underplayed the role of human creativity in learning language and overplayed the role of external conditions in influencing verbal behavior He proceeded to found MIT s graduate program in linguistics with Halle In 1961 Chomsky received tenure and became a full professor in the Department of Modern Languages and Linguistics He was appointed plenary speaker at the Ninth International Congress of Linguists held in 1962 in Cambridge Massachusetts which established him as the de facto spokesperson of American linguistics Between 1963 and 1965 he consulted on a military sponsored project to teach computers to understand natural English commands from military generals Chomsky continued to publish his linguistic ideas throughout the decade including in Aspects of the Theory of Syntax 1965 Topics in the Theory of Generative Grammar 1966 and Cartesian Linguistics A Chapter in the History of Rationalist Thought 1966 Along with Halle he also edited the Studies in Language series of books for Harper and Row As he began to accrue significant academic recognition and honors for his work Chomsky lectured at the University of California Berkeley in 1966 These lectures were published as Language and Mind in 1968 In the late 1960s a high profile intellectual rift later known as the linguistic wars developed between Chomsky and some of his colleagues and doctoral students including Paul Postal John Ross George Lakoff and James D McCawley who contended that Chomsky s syntax based interpretivist linguistics did not properly account for semantic context general semantics A post hoc assessment of this period concluded that the opposing programs ultimately were complementary each informing the other Anti war activism and dissent 1967 1975 I t does not require very far reaching specialized knowledge to perceive that the United States was invading South Vietnam And in fact to take apart the system of illusions and deception which functions to prevent understanding of contemporary reality is not a task that requires extraordinary skill or understanding It requires the kind of normal skepticism and willingness to apply one s analytical skills that almost all people have and that they can exercise Chomsky on the Vietnam War Chomsky joined protests against U S involvement in the Vietnam War in 1962 speaking on the subject at small gatherings in churches and homes His 1967 critique of U S involvement The Responsibility of Intellectuals among other contributions to The New York Review of Books debuted Chomsky as a public dissident This essay and other political articles were collected and published in 1969 as part of Chomsky s first political book American Power and the New Mandarins He followed this with further political books including At War with Asia 1970 The Backroom Boys 1973 For Reasons of State 1973 and Peace in the Middle East 1974 published by Pantheon Books These publications led to Chomsky s association with the American New Left movement though he thought little of prominent New Left intellectuals Herbert Marcuse and Erich Fromm and preferred the company of activists to that of intellectuals Chomsky remained largely ignored by the mainstream press throughout this period Chomsky also became involved in left wing activism Chomsky refused to pay half his taxes publicly supported students who refused the draft and was arrested while participating in an anti war teach in outside the Pentagon During this time Chomsky co founded the anti war collective RESIST with Mitchell Goodman Denise Levertov William Sloane Coffin and Dwight Macdonald Although he questioned the objectives of the 1968 student protests Chomsky regularly gave lectures to student activist groups and with his colleague Louis Kampf ran undergraduate courses on politics at MIT independently of the conservative dominated political science department When student activists campaigned to stop weapons and counterinsurgency research at MIT Chomsky was sympathetic but felt that the research should remain under MIT s oversight and limited to systems of deterrence and defense Chomsky has acknowledged that his MIT lab s funding at this time came from the military He later said he considered resigning from MIT during the Vietnam War There has since been a wide ranging debate about what effects Chomsky s employment at MIT had on his political and linguistic ideas External imagesChomsky participating in the anti Vietnam War March on the Pentagon October 21 1967Chomsky with other public figuresThe protesters passing the Lincoln Memorial en route to the Pentagon Chomsky s anti war activism led to his arrest on multiple occasions and he was on President Richard Nixon s master list of political opponents Chomsky was aware of the potential repercussions of his civil disobedience and his wife began studying for her own doctorate in linguistics to support the family in the event of Chomsky s imprisonment or joblessness Chomsky s scientific reputation insulated him from administrative action based on his beliefs In 1970 he visited southeast Asia to lecture at Vietnam s Hanoi University of Science and Technology and toured war refugee camps in Laos In 1973 he helped lead a committee commemorating the 50th anniversary of the War Resisters League Chomsky s work in linguistics continued to gain international recognition as he received multiple honorary doctorates He delivered public lectures at the University of Cambridge Columbia University Woodbridge Lectures and Stanford University His appearance in a 1971 debate with French continental philosopher Michel Foucault positioned Chomsky as a symbolic figurehead of analytic philosophy He continued to publish extensively on linguistics producing Studies on Semantics in Generative Grammar 1972 an enlarged edition of Language and Mind 1972 and Reflections on Language 1975 In 1974 Chomsky became a corresponding fellow of the British Academy Edward S Herman and the Faurisson affair 1976 1980 Chomsky in 1977 In the late 1970s and 1980s Chomsky s linguistic publications expanded and clarified his earlier work addressing his critics and updating his grammatical theory His political talks often generated considerable controversy particularly when he criticized the Israeli government and military In the early 1970s Chomsky began collaborating with Edward S Herman who had also published critiques of the U S war in Vietnam Together they wrote Counter Revolutionary Violence Bloodbaths in Fact amp Propaganda a book that criticized U S military involvement in Southeast Asia and the mainstream media s failure to cover it Warner Modular published it in 1973 but its parent company disapproved of the book s contents and ordered all copies destroyed While mainstream publishing options proved elusive Chomsky found support from Michael Albert s South End Press an activist oriented publishing company In 1979 South End published Chomsky and Herman s revised Counter Revolutionary Violence as the two volume The Political Economy of Human Rights which compares U S media reactions to the Cambodian genocide and the Indonesian occupation of East Timor It argues that because Indonesia was a U S ally U S media ignored the East Timorese situation while focusing on events in Cambodia a U S enemy Chomsky s response included two testimonials before the United Nations Special Committee on Decolonization successful encouragement for American media to cover the occupation and meetings with refugees in Lisbon Marxist academic Steven Lukes most prominently publicly accused Chomsky of betraying his anarchist ideals and acting as an apologist for Cambodian leader Pol Pot Herman said that the controversy imposed a serious personal cost on Chomsky who considered the personal criticism less important than the evidence that mainstream intelligentsia suppressed or justified the crimes of their own states Chomsky had long publicly criticized Nazism and totalitarianism more generally but his commitment to freedom of speech led him to defend the right of French historian Robert Faurisson to advocate a position widely characterized as Holocaust denial Without Chomsky s knowledge his plea for Faurisson s freedom of speech was published as the preface to the latter s 1980 book Memoire en defense contre ceux qui m accusent de falsifier l histoire Chomsky was widely condemned for defending Faurisson and France s mainstream press accused Chomsky of being a Holocaust denier himself refusing to publish his rebuttals to their accusations Critiquing Chomsky s position sociologist Werner Cohn later published an analysis of the affair titled Partners in Hate Noam Chomsky and the Holocaust Deniers The Faurisson affair had a lasting damaging effect on Chomsky s career especially in France Critique of propaganda and international affairs External videosManufacturing Consent Noam Chomsky and the Media a 1992 documentary exploring Chomsky s work of the same name and its impact In 1985 during the Nicaraguan Contra War in which the U S supported the contra militia against the Sandinista government Chomsky traveled to Managua to meet with workers organizations and refugees of the conflict giving public lectures on politics and linguistics Many of these lectures were published in 1987 as On Power and Ideology The Managua Lectures In 1983 he published The Fateful Triangle which argued that the U S had continually used the Israeli Palestinian conflict for its own ends In 1988 Chomsky visited the Palestinian territories to witness the impact of Israeli occupation Chomsky and Herman s Manufacturing Consent The Political Economy of the Mass Media 1988 outlines their propaganda model for understanding mainstream media Even in countries without official censorship they argued the news is censored through five filters that greatly influence both what and how news is presented The book received a 1992 film adaptation In 1989 Chomsky published Necessary Illusions Thought Control in Democratic Societies in which he suggests that a worthwhile democracy requires that its citizens undertake intellectual self defense against the media and elite intellectual culture that seeks to control them By the 1980s Chomsky s students had become prominent linguists who in turn expanded and revised his linguistic theories Chomsky speaking in support of the Occupy movement in 2011 In the 1990s Chomsky embraced political activism to a greater degree than before Retaining his commitment to the cause of East Timorese independence in 1995 he visited Australia to talk on the issue at the behest of the East Timorese Relief Association and the National Council for East Timorese Resistance The lectures he gave on the subject were published as Powers and Prospects in 1996 As a result of the international publicity Chomsky generated his biographer Wolfgang Sperlich opined that he did more to aid the cause of East Timorese independence than anyone but the investigative journalist John Pilger After East Timor attained independence from Indonesia in 1999 the Australian led International Force for East Timor arrived as a peacekeeping force Chomsky was critical of this believing it was designed to secure Australian access to East Timor s oil and gas reserves under the Timor Gap Treaty Chomsky was widely interviewed after the September 11 attacks in 2001 as the American public attempted to make sense of the attacks He argued that the ensuing War on Terror was not a new development but a continuation of U S foreign policy and concomitant rhetoric since at least the Reagan era He gave the D T Lakdawala Memorial Lecture in New Delhi in 2001 and in 2003 visited Cuba at the invitation of the Latin American Association of Social Scientists Chomsky s 2003 Hegemony or Survival articulated what he called the United States imperial grand strategy and critiqued the Iraq War and other aspects of the War on Terror Chomsky toured internationally with greater regularity during this period During the 2014 Scottish independence referendum Chomsky supported Scottish independence Retirement Chomsky retired from MIT in 2002 but continued to conduct research and seminars on campus as an emeritus That same year he visited Turkey to attend the trial of a publisher who had been accused of treason for printing one of Chomsky s books Chomsky insisted on being a co defendant and amid international media attention the Security Courts dropped the charge on the first day During that trip Chomsky visited Kurdish areas of Turkey and spoke out in favor of the Kurds human rights A supporter of the World Social Forum he attended its conferences in Brazil in both 2002 and 2003 also attending the Forum event in India source source source source source source Chomsky discussing ecology ethics and anarchism in 2014 Chomsky supported the 2011 Occupy movement speaking at encampments and publishing on the movement which he called a reaction to a 30 year class war The 2015 documentary Requiem for the American Dream summarizes his views on capitalism and economic inequality through a 75 minute teach in In 2015 Chomsky and his wife purchased a residence in Sao Paulo Brazil and began splitting their time between Brazil and the U S Chomsky taught a short term politics course at the University of Arizona in 2017 He was later hired as a part time professor in its linguistics department with duties including teaching and public seminars His salary was covered by philanthropic donations After a stroke in June 2023 Chomsky moved to Brazil full time Linguistic theoryWhat started as purely linguistic research has led through involvement in political causes and an identification with an older philosophic tradition to no less than an attempt to formulate an overall theory of man The roots of this are manifest in the linguistic theory The discovery of cognitive structures common to the human race but only to humans species specific leads quite easily to thinking of unalienable human attributes Edward Marcotte on the significance of Chomsky s linguistic theory The basis of Chomsky s linguistic theory lies in biolinguistics the linguistic school that holds that the principles underpinning the structure of language are biologically preset in the human mind and hence genetically inherited He argues that all humans share the same underlying linguistic structure irrespective of sociocultural differences In adopting this position Chomsky rejects the radical behaviorist psychology of B F Skinner who viewed speech thought and all behavior as a completely learned product of the interactions between organisms and their environments Accordingly Chomsky argues that language is a unique evolutionary development of the human species and distinguished from modes of communication used by any other animal species Chomsky argues that his nativist internalist view of language is consistent with the philosophical school of rationalism and contrasts with the anti nativist externalist view of language consistent with the philosophical school of empiricism which contends that all knowledge including language comes from external stimuli Historians have disputed Chomsky s claim about rationalism on the basis that his theory of innate grammar excludes propositional knowledge and instead focuses on innate learning capacities or structures Universal grammar Since the 1960s Chomsky has maintained that syntactic knowledge is partially inborn implying that children need only learn certain language specific features of their native languages He bases his argument on observations about human language acquisition and describes a poverty of the stimulus an enormous gap between the linguistic stimuli to which children are exposed and the rich linguistic competence they attain For example although children are exposed to only a very small and finite subset of the allowable syntactic variants within their first language they somehow acquire the highly organized and systematic ability to understand and produce an infinite number of sentences including ones that have never before been uttered in that language To explain this Chomsky proposed that the primary linguistic data must be supplemented by an innate linguistic capacity Furthermore while a human baby and a kitten are both capable of inductive reasoning if they are exposed to exactly the same linguistic data the human will always acquire the ability to understand and produce language while the kitten will never acquire either ability Chomsky referred to this difference in capacity as the language acquisition device and suggested that linguists needed to determine both what that device is and what constraints it imposes on the range of possible human languages The universal features that result from these constraints would constitute universal grammar Multiple researchers have challenged universal grammar on the grounds of the evolutionary infeasibility of its genetic basis for language the lack of crosslinguistic surface universals and the unproven link between innate universal structures and the structures of specific languages Michael Tomasello has challenged Chomsky s theory of innate syntactic knowledge as based on theory and not behavioral observation The empirical basis of poverty of the stimulus arguments has been challenged by Geoffrey Pullum and others leading to back and forth debate in the language acquisition literature Recent work has also suggested that some recurrent neural network architectures can learn hierarchical structure without an explicit constraint Generative grammar Chomsky is generally credited with launching the research tradition of generative grammar which aims to explain the cognitive basis of language by formulating and testing explicit models of humans subconscious grammatical knowledge Generative grammar proposes models of language consisting of explicit rule systems which make testable falsifiable predictions The goal of generative grammar is sometimes described as answering the question What is that that you know when you know a language Within generative grammar Chomsky s initial model was called transformational grammar Chomsky developed transformational grammar in the mid 1950s whereupon it became the dominant syntactic theory in linguistics for two decades Transformations are syntactic rules that derive surface structure from deep structure which was often considered to reflect the structure of meaning Transformational grammar later developed into the 1980s government and binding theory and thence into the minimalist program This research focused on the principles and parameters framework which explained children s ability to learn any language by filling open parameters a set of universal grammar principles that adapt as the child encounters linguistic data The minimalist program initiated by Chomsky asks which minimal principles and parameters theory fits most elegantly naturally and simply Set inclusions described by the Chomsky hierarchy Chomsky is commonly credited with inventing transformational generative grammar but his original contribution was considered modest when he first published his theory In his 1955 dissertation and his 1957 textbook Syntactic Structures he presented recent developments in the analysis formulated by Zellig Harris who was Chomsky s PhD supervisor and by Charles F Hockett Their method derives from the work of the structural linguist Louis Hjelmslev who introduced algorithmic grammar to general linguistics Based on this rule based notation of grammars Chomsky grouped logically possible phrase structure grammar types into a series of four nested subsets and increasingly complex types together known as the Chomsky hierarchy This classification remains relevant to formal language theory and theoretical computer science especially programming language theory compiler construction and automata theory Chomsky s Syntactic Structures became beyond generative linguistics as such a catalyst for connecting what in Hjelmslev s and Jespersen s time was the beginnings of structural linguistics which has become cognitive linguistics Political viewsThe second major area to which Chomsky has contributed and surely the best known in terms of the number of people in his audience and the ease of understanding what he writes and says is his work on sociopolitical analysis political social and economic history and critical assessment of current political circumstance In Chomsky s view although those in power might and do try to obscure their intentions and to defend their actions in ways that make them acceptable to citizens it is easy for anyone who is willing to be critical and consider the facts to discern what they are up to James McGilvray 2014 Chomsky is a prominent political dissident His political views have changed little since his childhood when he was influenced by the emphasis on political activism that was ingrained in Jewish working class tradition He usually identifies as an anarcho syndicalist or a libertarian socialist He views these positions not as precise political theories but as ideals that he thinks best meet human needs liberty community and freedom of association Unlike some other socialists such as Marxists Chomsky believes that politics lies outside the remit of science but he still roots his ideas about an ideal society in empirical data and empirically justified theories In Chomsky s view the truth about political realities is systematically distorted or suppressed by an elite corporatocracy which uses corporate media advertising and think tanks to promote its own propaganda His work seeks to reveal such manipulations and the truth they obscure Chomsky believes this web of falsehood can be broken by common sense critical thinking and understanding the roles of self interest and self deception and that intellectuals abdicate their moral responsibility to tell the truth about the world in fear of losing prestige and funding He argues that as such an intellectual it is his duty to use his social privilege resources and training to aid popular democracy movements in their struggles Although he has participated in direct action demonstrations joining protests being arrested organizing groups Chomsky s primary political outlet is education i e free public lessons He is a longtime member of the Industrial Workers of the World international union as was his father United States foreign policy Chomsky at the 2003 World Social Forum a convention for counter hegemonic globalization in Porto Alegre Chomsky has been a prominent critic of American imperialism but is not a pacifist believing World War II was justified as America s last defensive war He believes that U S foreign policy s basic principle is the establishment of open societies that are economically and politically controlled by the U S and where U S based businesses can prosper He argues that the U S seeks to suppress any movements within these countries that are not compliant with U S interests and to ensure that U S friendly governments are placed in power When discussing current events he emphasizes their place within a wider historical perspective He believes that official sanctioned historical accounts of U S and British extraterritorial operations have consistently whitewashed these nations actions in order to present them as having benevolent motives in either spreading democracy or in older instances spreading Christianity by criticizing these accounts he seeks to correct them Prominent examples he regularly cites are the actions of the British Empire in India and Africa and U S actions in Vietnam the Philippines Latin America and the Middle East Chomsky s political work has centered heavily on criticizing the actions of the United States He has said he focuses on the U S because the country has militarily and economically dominated the world during his lifetime and because its liberal democratic electoral system allows the citizenry to influence government policy His hope is that by spreading awareness of the impact U S foreign policies have on the populations affected by them he can sway the populations of the U S and other countries into opposing the policies He urges people to criticize their governments motivations decisions and actions to accept responsibility for their own thoughts and actions and to apply the same standards to others as to themselves Chomsky has been critical of U S involvement in the Israeli Palestinian conflict arguing that it has consistently blocked a peaceful settlement He also criticizes the U S s close ties with Saudi Arabia and involvement in Saudi Arabian led intervention in Yemen highlighting that Saudi Arabia has one of the most grotesque human rights records in the world Chomsky called the Russian invasion of Ukraine a criminal act of aggression and noted that Russia was committing major war crimes in the country He considered support for Ukraine s self defense legitimate and said Ukraine should be given enough military aid to defend itself but not enough to cause an escalation His criticism of the war focused on the United States He alleged that the U S rejected any compromise with Russia and that this might have provoked the invasion According to Chomsky the U S was arming Ukraine only to weaken Russia and Ukrainian requests for heavy weaponry were untrue Western propaganda despite Ukraine s President Volodymyr Zelensky repeatedly asking for them More than a year into the invasion Chomsky argued that Russia was waging the war more humanely than the U S did the invasion of Iraq Capitalism and socialism In his youth Chomsky developed a dislike of capitalism and the pursuit of material wealth At the same time he developed a disdain for authoritarian socialism as represented by the Marxist Leninist policies of the Soviet Union Rather than accepting the common view among U S economists that a spectrum exists between total state ownership of the economy and total private ownership he instead suggests that a spectrum should be understood between total democratic control of the economy and total autocratic control whether state or private He argues that Western capitalist countries are not really democratic because in his view a truly democratic society is one in which all persons have a say in public economic policy He has stated his opposition to ruling elites among them institutions like the IMF World Bank and GATT precursor to the WTO Chomsky highlights that since the 1970s the U S has become increasingly economically unequal as a result of the repeal of various financial regulations and the unilateral rescinding of the Bretton Woods financial control agreement by the U S He characterizes the U S as a de facto one party state viewing both the Republican Party and Democratic Party as manifestations of a single Business Party controlled by corporate and financial interests Chomsky highlights that within Western capitalist liberal democracies at least 80 of the population has no control over economic decisions which are instead in the hands of a management class and ultimately controlled by a small wealthy elite Noting the entrenchment of such an economic system Chomsky believes that change is possible through the organized cooperation of large numbers of people who understand the problem and know how they want to reorganize the economy more equitably Acknowledging that corporate domination of media and government stifles any significant change to this system he sees reason for optimism in historical examples such as the social rejection of slavery as immoral the advances in women s rights and the forcing of government to justify invasions He views violent revolution to overthrow a government as a last resort to be avoided if possible citing the example of historical revolutions where the population s welfare has worsened as a result of upheaval Chomsky sees libertarian socialist and anarcho syndicalist ideas as the descendants of the classical liberal ideas of the Age of Enlightenment arguing that his ideological position revolves around nourishing the libertarian and creative character of the human being He envisions an anarcho syndicalist future with direct worker control of the means of production and government by workers councils who would select temporary and revocable representatives to meet together at general assemblies The point of this self governance is to make each citizen in Thomas Jefferson s words a direct participator in the government of affairs He believes that there will be no need for political parties By controlling their productive life he believes that individuals can gain job satisfaction and a sense of fulfillment and purpose He argues that unpleasant and unpopular jobs could be fully automated specially remunerated or communally shared Israeli Palestinian conflict Chomsky has written prolifically about the Israeli Palestinian conflict aiming to raise public awareness of it A labor Zionist who later became what is today considered an anti Zionist Chomsky has criticized the Israeli settlements in the Israeli occupied West Bank which he likens to a settler colony He has said that the 1947 United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine was a bad decision but given the realpolitik of the situation he has also considered a two state solution on the condition that the nation states exist on equal terms Chomsky has said that characterizing Israel s treatment of the Palestinians as apartheid similar to the system that existed in South Africa would be a gift to Israel as he has long held that the Occupied Territories are much worse than South Africa South Africa depended on its black population for labor but Chomsky argues the same is not true of Israel which in his view seeks to make the situation for Palestinians under its occupation unlivable especially in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip where atrocities take place every day He also argues that unlike South Africa Israel has not sought the international community s approval but rather relies solely on U S support Chomsky has said that the Israeli led blockade of the Gaza Strip has turned it into a concentration camp and expressed fears similar to Israeli intellectual Yeshayahu Leibowitz s 1990s warning that the continued occupation of the Palestinian territories could turn Israeli Jews into Judeo Nazis Chomsky has said that Leibowitz s warning was a direct reflection of the continued occupation the humiliation of people the degradation and the terrorist attacks by the Israeli government He has also called the U S a violent state that exports violence by supporting Israeli atrocities against the Palestinians and said that listening to American mainstream media including CBS is like listening to Israeli propaganda agencies Chomsky was denied entry to the West Bank in 2010 because of his criticisms of Israel He had been invited to deliver a lecture at Bir Zeit University and was to meet with Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad An Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman later said that Chomsky was denied entry by mistake In his 1983 book The Fateful Triangle Chomsky criticized the Palestine Liberation Organization for its self destructiveness and suicidal character and disapproved of its programs of armed struggle and erratic violence He also criticized the Arab governments as not decent Given what he has described as his very Jewish upbringing with deeply Zionist activist parents Chomsky s views have drawn controversy and criticism They are rooted in the kibbutzim and socialist binational cooperation In a 2014 interview on Democracy Now Chomsky said that the charter of Hamas which calls for Israel s destruction means practically nothing having been created by a small group of people under siege under attack in 1988 He compared it to the electoral program of the Likud party which he said states explicitly that there can never be a Palestinian state west of the Jordan River And they not only state it in their charter that s a call for the destruction of Palestine explicit call for it Mass media and propaganda External videosChomsky on propaganda and the manufacturing of consent June 1 2003 Chomsky s political writings have largely focused on ideology social and political power mass media and state policy One of his best known works Manufacturing Consent dissects the media s role in reinforcing and acquiescing to state policies across the political spectrum while marginalizing contrary perspectives Chomsky asserts that this version of censorship by government guided free market forces is subtler and harder to undermine than was the equivalent propaganda system in the Soviet Union As he argues the mainstream press is corporate owned and thus reflects corporate priorities and interests Acknowledging that many American journalists are dedicated and well meaning he argues that the mass media s choices of topics and issues the unquestioned premises on which that coverage rests and the range of opinions expressed are all constrained to reinforce the state s ideology although mass media will criticize individual politicians and political parties it will not undermine the wider state corporate nexus of which it is a part As evidence he highlights that the U S mass media does not employ any socialist journalists or political commentators He also points to examples of important news stories that the U S mainstream media has ignored because reporting on them would reflect badly upon the country including the murder of Black Panther Fred Hampton with possible FBI involvement the massacres in Nicaragua perpetrated by U S funded Contras and the constant reporting on Israeli deaths without equivalent coverage of the far larger number of Palestinian deaths in that conflict To remedy this situation Chomsky calls for grassroots democratic control and involvement of the media Chomsky considers most conspiracy theories fruitless distracting substitutes for thinking about policy formation in an institutional framework where individual manipulation is secondary to broader social imperatives He separates his Propaganda Model from conspiracy in that he is describing institutions following their natural imperatives rather than collusive forces with secret controls Instead of supporting the educational system as an antidote he believes that most education is counterproductive Chomsky describes mass education as a system solely intended to turn farmers from independent producers into unthinking industrial employees Reactions of critics and counter criticism 1980s present In the 2004 book The Anti Chomsky Reader Peter Collier and David Horowitz accuse Chomsky of cherry picking facts to suit his theories Horowitz has also criticized Chomsky s anti Americanism For 40 years Noam Chomsky has turned out book after book pamphlet after pamphlet and speech after speech with one message and one message alone America is the Great Satan it is the fount of evil in the world In Chomsky s demented universe America is responsible not only for its own bad deeds but for the bad deeds of others including those of the terrorists who struck the World Trade Center and the Pentagon In this attitude he is the medium for all those who now search the ruins of Manhattan not for the victims and the American dead but for the root causes of the catastrophe that befell them For the conservative public policy think tank the Hoover Institution Peter Schweizer wrote in January 2006 Chomsky favors the estate tax and massive income redistribution just not the redistribution of his income Schweizer criticized Chomsky for setting up an estate plan and protecting his own intellectual property as it relates to his published works as well as the high speaking fees that Chomsky received on a regular basis around 9 000 12 000 per talk at that time Chomsky has been accused of treating socialist or communist regimes with credulity and examining capitalist regimes with greater scrutiny or criticism Chomsky s analysis of U S actions plunged deep into dark U S machinations but when traveling among the Communists he rested content with appearances The countryside outside Hanoi he reported in The New York Review of Books displayed a high degree of democratic participation at the village and regional levels But how could he tell Chomsky did not speak Vietnamese and so he depended on government translators tour guides and handlers for information In Communist Vietnamese hands the clear eyed skepticism turned into willing credulousness According to Nikolas Kozloff writing for Al Jazeera in September 2012 Chomsky has drawn the world s attention to the various misdeeds of the US and its proxies around the world and for that he deserves credit Yet in seeking to avoid controversy at all costs Chomsky has turned into something of an ideologue Scour the Chomsky web site and you won t find significant discussion of Belarus or Latin America s flirtation with outside authoritarian leaders for that matter Political activist George Monbiot has argued that Part of the problem is that a kind of cult has developed around Noam Chomsky and John Pilger which cannot believe they could ever be wrong and produces ever more elaborate conspiracy theories to justify their mistakes Anarchist and primitivist John Zerzan has accused Chomsky of not being a real anarchist saying that he is instead a liberal leftist politically and downright reactionary in his academic specialty linguistic theory Chomsky is also by all accounts a generous sincere tireless activist which does not unfortunately ensure his thinking has liberatory value Defenders of Chomsky have countered that he has been censored or left out of public debate Claims of this nature date to the Reagan era Writing for The Washington Post in February 1988 Saul Landau wrote It is unhealthy that Chomsky s insights are excluded from the policy debate His relentless prosecutorial prose with a hint of Talmudic whine and the rationalist anarchism of Tom Paine may reflect a justified frustration PhilosophyChomsky has also been active in a number of philosophical fields including philosophy of mind philosophy of language and philosophy of science In these fields he is credited with ushering in the cognitive revolution a significant paradigm shift that rejected logical positivism the prevailing philosophical methodology of the time and reframed how philosophers think about language and the mind Chomsky views the cognitive revolution as rooted in 17th century rationalist ideals His position the idea that the mind contains inherent structures to understand language perception and thought has more in common with rationalism than behaviorism He named one of his key works Cartesian Linguistics A Chapter in the History of Rationalist Thought 1966 This sparked criticism from historians and philosophers who disagreed with Chomsky s interpretations of classical sources and use of philosophical terminology In the philosophy of language Chomsky is particularly known for his criticisms of the notion of reference and meaning in human language and his perspective on the nature and function of mental representations Chomsky s famous 1971 debate on human nature with the French philosopher Michel Foucault was a symbolic clash of the analytic and continental philosophy traditions represented by Chomsky and Foucault respectively It showed what appeared to be irreconcilable differences between two moral and intellectual luminaries of the 20th century Foucault held that any definition of human nature is connected to our present day conceptions of ourselves Chomsky held that human nature contained universals such as a common standard of moral justice as deduced through reason Chomsky criticized postmodernism and French philosophy generally arguing that the obscure language of postmodern leftist philosophers gives little aid to the working classes He has also debated analytic philosophers including Tyler Burge Donald Davidson Michael Dummett Saul Kripke Thomas Nagel Hilary Putnam Willard Van Orman Quine and John Searle Chomsky s contributions span intellectual and world history including the history of philosophy Irony is a recurring characteristic of his writing such as rhetorically implying that his readers already know something to be true which engages the reader more actively in assessing the veracity of his claims Personal lifeWasserman and Chomsky in 2014 Chomsky endeavors to separate his family life linguistic scholarship and political activism from each other An intensely private person he is uninterested in appearances and the fame his work has brought him McGilvray suggests that Chomsky is not motivated by a desire for fame but impelled to tell what he perceives as the truth and a desire to aid others in doing so Chomsky acknowledges that his income affords him a privileged life compared to the majority of the world s population nevertheless he characterizes himself as a worker albeit one who uses his intellect as his employable skill He reads four or five newspapers daily in the U S he subscribes to The Boston Globe The New York Times The Wall Street Journal Financial Times and The Christian Science Monitor Chomsky is not religious but has expressed approval of forms of religion such as liberation theology Chomsky is known to use charged language corrupt fascist fraudulent when describing established political and academic figures which can polarize his audience but is in keeping with his belief that much scholarship is self serving His colleague Steven Pinker has said that Chomsky portrays people who disagree with him as stupid or evil using withering scorn in his rhetoric and that this contributes to the extreme reactions he receives Chomsky avoids academic conferences including left oriented ones such as the Socialist Scholars Conference preferring to speak to activist groups or hold university seminars for mass audiences His approach to academic freedom has led him to support MIT academics whose actions he deplores in 1969 when Chomsky heard that Walt Rostow a major architect of the Vietnam war wanted to return to work at MIT Chomsky threatened to protest publicly if Rostow were denied a position at MIT In 1989 when Pentagon adviser John Deutch applied to be president of MIT Chomsky supported his candidacy Later when Deutch became head of the CIA The New York Times quoted Chomsky as saying He has more honesty and integrity than anyone I ve ever met If somebody s got to be running the CIA I m glad it s him Chomsky was married to Carol Doris nee Schatz from 1949 until her death in 2008 They had three children together Aviva b 1957 Diane b 1960 and Harry b 1967 In 2014 Chomsky married Valeria Wasserman They have owned a home in Wasserman s native country Brazil since 2015 In 2023 Chomsky suffered a massive stroke and was flown to a hospital in Sao Paulo Brazil to recuperate He can no longer walk or communicate making his return to public life improbable but he continues to follow current events such as the Israel Hamas war He was discharged in June 2024 to continue his recovery at home The same month Chomsky trended on social media amid false reports of his death Periodicals retracted premature obituaries Reception and influence Chomsky s voice is heard in academia beyond linguistics and philosophy from computer science to neuroscience from anthropology to education mathematics and literary criticism If we include Chomsky s political activism then the boundaries become quite blurred and it comes as no surprise that Chomsky is increasingly seen as enemy number one by those who inhabit that wide sphere of reactionary discourse and action Sperlich 2006 Chomsky has been a defining Western intellectual figure central to the field of linguistics and definitive in cognitive science computer science philosophy and psychology In addition to being known as one of the most important intellectuals of his time Chomsky has a dual legacy as a leader and luminary in both linguistics and the realm of political dissent Despite his academic success his political viewpoints and activism have resulted in his being distrusted by mainstream media and he is regarded as being on the outer margin of acceptability Chomsky s public image and social reputation often color his work s public reception In academia McGilvray observes that Chomsky inaugurated the cognitive revolution in linguistics and that he is largely responsible for establishing the field as a formal natural science moving it away from the procedural form of structural linguistics dominant during the mid 20th century As such some have called Chomsky the father of modern linguistics Linguist John Lyons further remarked that within a few decades of publication Chomskyan linguistics had become the most dynamic and influential school of thought in the field By the 1970s his work had also come to exert a considerable influence on philosophy and a Minnesota State University Moorhead poll ranked Syntactic Structures as the single most important work in cognitive science In addition his work in automata theory and the Chomsky hierarchy have become well known in computer science and he is much cited in computational linguistics Chomsky s criticisms of behaviorism contributed substantially to the decline of behaviorist psychology in addition he is generally regarded as one of the primary founders of the field of cognitive science Some arguments in evolutionary psychology are derived from his research results Nim Chimpsky a chimpanzee who was the subject of a study in animal language acquisition at Columbia University was named after Chomsky in reference to his view of language acquisition as a uniquely human ability ACM Turing Award winner Donald Knuth credited Chomsky s work with helping him combine his interests in mathematics linguistics and computer science IBM computer scientist John Backus another Turing Award winner used some of Chomsky s concepts to help him develop FORTRAN the first widely used high level computer programming language Chomsky s theory of generative grammar has also influenced work in music theory and analysis such as Fred Lerdahl s and Ray Jackendoff s generative theory of tonal music Chomsky is among the most cited authors living or dead He was cited within the Arts and Humanities Citation Index more often than any other living scholar from 1980 to 1992 Chomsky was also extensively cited in the Social Sciences Citation Index and Science Citation Index during the same period The librarian who conducted the research said that the statistics show that he is very widely read across disciplines and that his work is used by researchers across disciplines it seems that you can t write a paper without citing Noam Chomsky As a result of his influence there are dueling camps of Chomskyan and non Chomskyan linguistics Their disputes are often acrimonious Additionally according to journalist Maya Jaggi Chomsky is among the most quoted sources in the humanities ranking alongside Marx Shakespeare and the Bible In politics Chomsky s status as the most quoted living author is credited to his political writings which vastly outnumber his writings on linguistics Chomsky biographer Wolfgang B Sperlich characterizes him as one of the most notable contemporary champions of the people journalist John Pilger has described him as a genuine people s hero an inspiration for struggles all over the world for that basic decency known as freedom To a lot of people in the margins activists and movements he s unfailingly supportive Arundhati Roy has called him one of the greatest most radical public thinkers of our time and Edward Said thought him one of the most significant challengers of unjust power and delusions Fred Halliday has said that by the start of the 21st century Chomsky had become a guru for the world s anti capitalist and anti imperialist movements The propaganda model of media criticism that he and Herman developed has been widely accepted in radical media critiques and adopted to some level in mainstream criticism of the media also exerting a significant influence on the growth of alternative media including radio publishers and the Internet which in turn have helped to disseminate his work Despite this broad influence university departments devoted to history and political science rarely include Chomsky s work on their undergraduate syllabi Critics have argued that despite publishing widely on social and political issues Chomsky has no formal expertise in these areas he has responded that such issues are not as complex as many social scientists claim and that almost everyone is able to comprehend them regardless of whether they have been academically trained to do so Some have responded to these criticisms by questioning the critics motives and their understanding of Chomsky s ideas Sperlich for instance says that Chomsky has been vilified by corporate interests particularly in the mainstream press Likewise according to McGilvray many of Chomsky s critics do not bother quoting his work or quote out of context distort and create straw men that cannot be supported by Chomsky s text Chomsky drew criticism for not calling the Bosnian War s Srebrenica massacre a genocide While he did not deny the fact of the massacre which he called a horror story and major crime he felt the massacre did not meet the definition of genocide Critics have accused Chomsky of denying the Bosnian genocide Chomsky s far reaching criticisms of U S foreign policy and the legitimacy of U S power have raised controversy A document obtained pursuant to a Freedom of Information Act FOIA request from the U S government revealed that the Central Intelligence Agency CIA monitored his activities and for years denied doing so The CIA also destroyed its files on Chomsky at some point possibly in violation of federal law He has often received undercover police protection at MIT and when speaking on the Middle East but has refused uniformed police protection German news magazine Der Spiegel described Chomsky as the Ayatollah of anti American hatred while American conservative commentator David Horowitz called him the most devious the most dishonest and the most treacherous intellect in America whose work is infused with anti American dementia and evidences his pathological hatred of his own country Writing in Commentary magazine the journalist Jonathan Kay described Chomsky as a hard boiled anti American monomaniac who simply refuses to believe anything that any American leader says Chomsky s criticism of Israel has led to his being called a traitor to the Jewish people and an anti Semite Criticizing Chomsky s defense of the right of individuals to engage in Holocaust denial on the grounds that freedom of speech must be extended to all viewpoints Werner Cohn called Chomsky the most important patron of the neo Nazi movement The Anti Defamation League ADL called him a Holocaust denier describing him as a dupe of intellectual pride so overweening that he is incapable of making distinctions between totalitarian and democratic societies between oppressors and victims In turn Chomsky has claimed that the ADL is dominated by Stalinist types who oppose democracy in Israel The lawyer Alan Dershowitz has called Chomsky a false prophet of the left Chomsky called Dershowitz a complete liar who is on a crazed jihad dedicating much of his life to trying to destroy my reputation In early 2016 President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey publicly rebuked Chomsky after he signed an open letter condemning Erdogan for his anti Kurdish repression and double standards on terrorism Chomsky accused Erdogan of hypocrisy noting that Erdogan supports al Qaeda s Syrian affiliate the al Nusra Front Academic achievements awards and honors Chomsky receiving an award from the president of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation David Krieger 2014 In 1970 the London Times named Chomsky one of the makers of the twentieth century He was voted the world s leading public intellectual in The 2005 Global Intellectuals Poll jointly conducted by American magazine Foreign Policy and British magazine Prospect New Statesman readers listed Chomsky among the world s foremost heroes in 2006 In 2011 the US Peace Memorial Foundation awarded The US Peace Prize to Chomsky w hose antiwar activities for five decades both educate and inspire In the United States he is a Member of the National Academy of Sciences the American Academy of Arts and Sciences the Linguistic Society of America the American Association for the Advancement of Science the American Philosophical Association and the American Philosophical Society Abroad he is a corresponding fellow of the British Academy an honorary member of the British Psychological Society a member of the Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher Leopoldina and a foreign member of the Department of Social Sciences of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts He received a 1971 Guggenheim Fellowship the 1984 American Psychological Association Award for Distinguished Contributions to Psychology the 1988 Kyoto Prize in Basic Sciences the 1996 Helmholtz Medal the 1999 Benjamin Franklin Medal in Computer and Cognitive Science the 2010 Erich Fromm Prize and the British Academy s 2014 Neil and Saras Smith Medal for Linguistics He is also a two time winner of the NCTE George Orwell Award for Distinguished Contribution to Honesty and Clarity in Public Language 1987 and 1989 He has also received the Rabindranath Tagore Centenary Award from The Asiatic Society Chomsky received the 2004 Carl von Ossietzky Prize from the city of Oldenburg Germany to acknowledge his body of work as a political analyst and media critic He received an honorary fellowship in 2005 from the Literary and Historical Society of University College Dublin He received the 2008 President s Medal from the Literary and Debating Society of the National University of Ireland Galway Since 2009 he has been an honorary member of International Association of Professional Translators and Interpreters IAPTI He received the University of Wisconsin s A E Havens Center s Award for Lifetime Contribution to Critical Scholarship and was inducted into IEEE Intelligent Systems AI s Hall of Fame for significant contributions to the field of AI and intelligent systems Chomsky has an Erdos number of four In 2011 the US Peace Memorial Foundation awarded Chomsky the US Peace Prize for anti war activities over five decades For his work in human rights peace and social criticism he received the 2011 Sydney Peace Prize the Sretenje Order in 2015 the 2017 Sean MacBride Peace Prize and the Dorothy Eldridge Peacemaker Award Chomsky has received honorary doctorates from institutions including the University of London and the University of Chicago 1967 Loyola University Chicago and Swarthmore College 1970 Bard College 1971 Delhi University 1972 the University of Massachusetts 1973 and the International School for Advanced Studies 2012 Public lectures given by Chomsky include the 1969 John Locke Lectures 1975 Whidden Lectures 1977 Huizinga Lecture and 1988 Massey Lectures Various tributes to Chomsky have been dedicated over the years He is the eponym for a bee species a frog species an asteroid and a building complex at the Indian university Jamia Millia Islamia Actor Viggo Mortensen and avant garde guitarist Buckethead dedicated their 2003 album Pandemoniumfromamerica to Chomsky Selected bibliographyLinguistics Syntactic Structures 1957 Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 1964 Aspects of the Theory of Syntax 1965 Cartesian Linguistics 1965 Language and Mind 1968 The Sound Pattern of English with Morris Halle 1968 Reflections on Language 1975 Lectures on Government and Binding 1981 The Minimalist Program 1995 Politics American Power and the New Mandarins 1969 For Reasons of State 1973 Counter Revolutionary Violence Bloodbaths in Fact amp Propaganda with Edward S Herman 1973 The Political Economy of Human Rights 1979 Towards a New Cold War 1982 The Fateful Triangle 1983 Pirates and Emperors 1986 Manufacturing Consent 1988 Necessary Illusions 1989 Deterring Democracy 1991 Letters from Lexington 1993 The Prosperous Few and the Restless Many 1993 World Orders Old and New 1994 Objectivity and Liberal Scholarship 1997 Profit over People 1999 9 11 2001 Understanding Power 2002 Middle East Illusions 2003 Hegemony or Survival 2003 Getting Haiti Right This Time 2004 Imperial Ambitions 2005 Failed States The Abuse of Power and the Assault on Democracy 2006 Interventions 2007 Gaza in Crisis 2010 Making the Future 2012 Occupy 2012 Requiem for the American Dream 2017 The Withdrawal 2022 See alsoAnarchism in the United States American philosophy List of linguists List of peace activists List of pioneers in computer science Theory of languageNotesPronounced n oʊ m ˈ tʃ ɒ m s k i nohm CHOM skee Fox 1998 Mr Chomsky is the father of modern linguistics and remains the field s most influential practitioner Tymoczko amp Henle 2004 p 101 As the founder of modern linguistics Noam Chomsky observed each of the following sequences of words is nonsense Tanenhaus 2016 At 87 Noam Chomsky the founder of modern linguistics remains a vital presence in American intellectual life Smith 2004 pp 107 Chomsky s early work was renowned for its mathematical rigor and he made some contribution to the nascent discipline of mathematical linguistics in particular the analysis of formal languages in terms of what is now known as the Chomsky hierarchy Koerner 1983 pp 159 Characteristically Harris proposes a transfer of sentences from English to Modern Hebrew Chomsky s approach to syntax in Syntactic Structures and several years thereafter was not much different from Harris s approach since the concept of deep or underlying structure had not yet been introduced The main difference between Harris 1954 and Chomsky 1957 appears to be that the latter is dealing with transfers within one single language only Koerner 1978 pp 41f it is worth noting that Chomsky cites Hjelmslev s Prolegomena which had been translated into English in 1953 since the authors theoretical argument derived largely from logic and mathematics exhibits noticeable similarities Seuren 1998 pp 166 Both Hjelmslev and Harris were inspired by the mathematical notion of an algorithm as a purely formal production system for a set of strings of symbols it is probably accurate to say that Hjelmslev was the first to try and apply it to the generation of strings of symbols in natural language Hjelmslev 1969 Prolegomena to a Theory of Language Danish original 1943 first English translation 1954 Macintyre 2010 Burris 2013 Noam Chomsky has built his entire reputation as a political dissident on his command of the facts McNeill 2014 Chomsky is often dubbed one of the world s most important intellectuals and its leading public dissident Hamans amp Seuren 2010 p 377 Having achieved a unique position of supremacy in the theory of syntax and having exploited that position far beyond the narrow circles of professional syntacticians he felt the need to shore up his theory with the authority of history It is shown that this attempt resulting mainly in his Cartesian Linguistics of 1966 was widely and rightly judged to be a radical failure McNeill 2014 Chomsky is often dubbed one of the world s most important intellectuals Campbell 2005 Noam Chomsky the linguistics professor who has become one of the most outspoken critics of US foreign policy has won a poll that names him as the world s top public intellectual Robinson 1979 Judged in terms of the power range novelty and influence of his thought Noam Chomsky is arguably the most important intellectual alive today Flint 1995 The man once called the most important intellectual alive keeps his office in the campus of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Knight 2016 p 2 In 1992 the Arts and Humanities Citation Index ranked him as the most cited person alive the Index s top ten being Marx Lenin Shakespeare Aristotle the Bible Plato Freud Chomsky Hegel and Cicero Babe 2015 p xvii Chomsky was the most cited living scholar between 1980 and 1992 according to the Arts and Humanities Citation Index ReferencesChomsky 1991 p 50 Sperlich 2006 pp 44 45 Slife 1993 p 115 Barsky 1997 p 58 Antony amp Hornstein 2003 p 295 Chomsky 2016 Harbord 1994 p 487 Barsky 2007 p 107 Smith 2004 p 185 Amid the Philosophers Persson amp LaFollette 2013 Prickett 2002 p 234 Searle 1972 Adams 2003 Gould 1981 Kyle Kulinski Speaks the Bernie Bros Listen Archived from the original on March 5 2020 Retrieved February 9 2022 Keller 2007 Swartz 2006 Noam Chomsky Israel s Actions in Palestine are Much Worse Than Apartheid in South Africa Democracy Now Lyons 1978 p xv Barsky 1997 p 9 McGilvray 2014 p 3 Barsky 1997 pp 9 10 Sperlich 2006 p 11 Barsky 1997 p 9 Barsky 1997 p 11 Russ Valerie July 12 2021 Dr David Chomsky a cardiologist who made house calls dies at 86 The Philadelphia Inquirer Archived from the original on July 12 2021 Retrieved September 10 2021 Barsky 1997 pp 11 13 Barsky 1997 p 15 Lyons 1978 p xv Barsky 1997 pp 15 17 Sperlich 2006 p 12 McGilvray 2014 p 3 Lyons 1978 p xv Barsky 1997 pp 21 22 Sperlich 2006 p 14 McGilvray 2014 p 4 Lyons 1978 p xv Barsky 1997 pp 15 17 Barsky 1997 p 14 Sperlich 2006 pp 11 14 15 Barsky 1997 p 23 Sperlich 2006 pp 12 14 15 67 McGilvray 2014 p 4 Barsky 1997 p 23 Barsky 1997 pp 16 19 Sperlich 2006 p 13 Barsky 1997 p 18 Sperlich 2006 p 18 Barsky 1997 p 47 Sperlich 2006 p 16 Barsky 1997 p 47 Sperlich 2006 p 17 Barsky 1997 pp 48 51 Sperlich 2006 pp 18 19 31 Barsky 1997 pp 51 52 Sperlich 2006 p 32 Barsky 1997 pp 51 52 Sperlich 2006 p 33 Sperlich 2006 p 33 Lyons 1978 p xv Barsky 1997 p 79 Sperlich 2006 p 20 Sperlich 2006 p 34 Sperlich 2006 pp 33 34 Barsky 1997 p 81 Barsky 1997 pp 83 85 Sperlich 2006 p 36 McGilvray 2014 pp 4 5 Sperlich 2006 p 38 Sperlich 2006 p 36 Barsky 1997 pp 13 48 51 52 Sperlich 2006 pp 18 19 Sperlich 2006 p 20 Sperlich 2006 pp 20 21 Barsky 1997 p 82 Sperlich 2006 pp 20 21 Barsky 1997 p 24 Sperlich 2006 p 13 Barsky 1997 pp 24 25 Barsky 1997 p 26 Barsky 1997 pp 34 35 Barsky 1997 p 36 Lyons 1978 p xv Barsky 1997 pp 86 87 Sperlich 2006 pp 38 40 Barsky 1997 p 87 Lyons 1978 p xvi Barsky 1997 p 91 Barsky 1997 p 91 Sperlich 2006 p 22 Barsky 1997 pp 88 91 Sperlich 2006 p 40 McGilvray 2014 p 5 Chomsky 2022 Barsky 1997 pp 88 91 Lyons 1978 p 1 Lyons 1978 p xvi Barsky 1997 p 84 Lyons 1978 p 6 Barsky 1997 pp 96 99 Sperlich 2006 p 41 McGilvray 2014 p 5 MacCorquodale 1970 pp 83 99 Barsky 1997 pp 101 102 119 Sperlich 2006 p 23 Barsky 1997 p 102 Knight 2018a Barsky 1997 p 103 Barsky 1997 p 104 Lyons 1978 p xvi Barsky 1997 p 120 Barsky 1997 p 122 Barsky 1997 pp 149 152 Barsky 1997 p 114 Sperlich 2006 p 78 Barsky 1997 pp 120 122 Sperlich 2006 p 83 Lyons 1978 p xvii Barsky 1997 p 123 Sperlich 2006 p 83 Lyons 1978 pp xvi xvii Barsky 1997 p 163 Sperlich 2006 p 87 Lyons 1978 p 5 Barsky 1997 p 123 Barsky 1997 pp 134 135 Barsky 1997 pp 162 163 Lyons 1978 p 5 Barsky 1997 pp 127 129 Lyons 1978 p 5 Barsky 1997 pp 127 129 Sperlich 2006 pp 80 81 Barsky 1997 pp 121 122 131 Barsky 1997 p 121 Sperlich 2006 p 78 Barsky 1997 pp 121 122 140 141 Albert 2006 p 98 Knight 2016 p 34 Chomsky 1996 p 102 Allott Knight amp Smith 2019 p 62 Hutton 2020 p 32 Harris 2021 pp 399 400 426 454 Barsky 1997 p 124 Sperlich 2006 p 80 Barsky 1997 pp 123 124 Sperlich 2006 p 22 Barsky 1997 p 143 Barsky 1997 p 153 Sperlich 2006 pp 24 25 84 85 Lyons 1978 pp xv xvi Barsky 1997 pp 120 143 Barsky 1997 p 156 Greif 2015 pp 312 313 Sperlich 2006 p 51 Barsky 1997 p 175 Barsky 1997 pp 167 170 Barsky 1997 p 157 Barsky 1997 pp 160 162 Sperlich 2006 p 86 Sperlich 2006 p 85 Barsky 1997 p 187 Sperlich 2006 p 86 Barsky 1997 p 187 Sperlich 2006 p 103 Barsky 2007 p 98 Barsky 1997 pp 187 189 Barsky 1997 p 190 Barsky 1997 pp 179 180 Sperlich 2006 p 61 Barsky 1997 p 185 Sperlich 2006 p 61 Barsky 1997 p 184 Barsky 1997 p 78 Barsky 1997 p 185 Birnbaum 2010 Aeschimann 2010 Sperlich 2006 pp 91 92 Sperlich 2006 p 91 Sperlich 2006 p 99 McGilvray 2014 p 13 Sperlich 2006 p 98 Barsky 1997 pp 160 202 Sperlich 2006 pp 127 134 Sperlich 2006 p 136 Sperlich 2006 pp 138 139 Sperlich 2006 p 53 Barsky 1997 p 214 Sperlich 2006 p 104 Sperlich 2006 p 107 Sperlich 2006 pp 109 110 Sperlich 2006 pp 110 111 Sperlich 2006 p 143 The Hindu 2001 Sperlich 2006 p 120 Sperlich 2006 pp 114 118 Scottish independence Noam Chomsky backing Yes April 24 2014 Weidenfeld 2017 Sperlich 2006 p 10 Sperlich 2006 p 25 Sperlich 2006 pp 112 113 120 Feffer John April 6 2012 Review Noam Chomsky s Occupy Foreign Policy In Focus Archived from the original on April 17 2023 Retrieved April 17 2023 Gold 2016 Linguist and activist Noam Chomsky hospitalized in his wife s native country of Brazil after stroke Associated Press June 11 2024 Retrieved June 19 2024 Harwood 2016 Ortiz 2017 Mace 2017 Baughman et al 2006 Lyons 1978 p 4 McGilvray 2014 pp 2 3 Lyons 1978 p 7 Lyons 1978 p 6 McGilvray 2014 pp 2 3 Brain From Top To Bottom McGilvray 2014 p 11 Markie Peter 2017 Rationalism vs Empiricism In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Stanford University ISSN 1095 5054 Archived from the original on November 22 2023 Retrieved October 11 2023 Dovey 2015 Chomsky Thornbury 2006 p 234 O Grady 2015 Christiansen amp Chater 2010 p 489 Ruiter amp Levinson 2010 p 518 Evans amp Levinson 2009 p 429 Tomasello 2009 p 470 Tomasello 2003 p 284 Tomasello 1995 p 131 Pullum Geoff Scholz Barbara 2002 Empirical assessment of stimulus poverty arguments The Linguistic Review 18 1 2 9 50 doi 10 1515 tlir 19 1 2 9 Legate Julie Anne Yang Charles 2002 Empirical re assessment of stimulus poverty arguments PDF The Linguistic Review 18 1 2 151 162 doi 10 1515 tlir 19 1 2 9 McCoy R Thomas Frank Robert Linzen Tal 2018 Revisiting the poverty of the stimulus hierarchical generalization without a hierarchical bias in recurrent neural networks PDF Proceedings of the 40th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society 2093 2098 arXiv 1802 09091 Wasow Thomas 2003 Generative Grammar PDF In Aronoff Mark Ress Miller Janie eds The Handbook of Linguistics Blackwell pp 296 311 doi 10 1002 9780470756409 ch12 generative grammar is not so much a theory as a family or theories or a school of thought having shared assumptions and goals widely used formal devices and generally accepted empirical results Carnie Andrew 2002 Syntax A Generative Introduction Wiley Blackwell p 5 ISBN 978 0 631 22543 0 Harlow 2010 p 752 Hornstein 2003 Szabo 2010 Butterfield Ngondi amp Kerr 2016 Knuth 2002 Davis Weyuker amp Sigal 1994 p 327 Bierwisch Manfred 2019 Strukturelle Grammatik semantische Universalien und Arbitraritat Ein Gesprach mit Manfred Bierwisch www gespraech manfred bierwisch de Section 3 starting at 31 min Retrieved September 3 2024 McGilvray 2014 p 12 Barsky 1997 p 95 McGilvray 2014 p 4 Sperlich 2006 p 77 Sperlich 2006 p 14 McGilvray 2014 pp 17 158 McGilvray 2014 p 17 Sperlich 2006 p 74 McGilvray 2014 p 16 McGilvray 2014 p 222 Sperlich 2006 p 8 McGilvray 2014 p 158 Sperlich 2006 p 74 McGilvray 2014 pp 12 13 McGilvray 2014 p 159 McGilvray 2014 p 161 Sperlich 2006 p 71 Edgley Alison 2016 Noam Chomsky Springer p 42 ISBN 978 1 137 32021 6 Archived from the original on February 12 2023 Retrieved February 12 2023 Goldman Jan ed 2014 Chomsky Noam The War on Terror Encyclopedia From the Rise of Al Qaeda to 9 11 and Beyond ABC CLIO p 87 ISBN 978 1 61069 511 4 Archived from the original on February 12 2023 Retrieved February 12 2023 Milne 2009 Atkins Stephen E June 2 2011 Chomsky Noam The 9 11 Encyclopedia 2nd ed ABC CLIO p 108 ISBN 978 1 59884 922 6 Sperlich 2006 p 92 McGilvray 2014 p 160 McGilvray 2014 p 13 McGilvray 2014 pp 14 160 McGilvray 2014 p 18 Democracy Now 2016 Noam Chomsky and Jeremy Scahill on the Russia Ukraine War the Media Propaganda and Accountability The Intercept April 14 2022 Archived from the original on June 4 2022 Retrieved June 4 2022 Noam Chomsky Says Ukraine Desire for Heavy Weapons Is Western Propaganda Newsweek May 13 2022 Vock Ido April 29 2023 Noam Chomsky Russia is fighting more humanely than the US did in Iraq The New Statesman Archived from the original on June 10 2023 Retrieved July 23 2023 Sperlich 2006 p 15 Barsky 1997 p 168 Sperlich 2006 p 16 McGilvray 2014 pp 164 165 McGilvray 2014 p 169 McGilvray 2014 p 170 Barsky 1997 p 211 McGilvray 2014 p 14 McGilvray 2014 pp 14 15 McGilvray 2014 p 15 Sperlich 2006 p 89 McGilvray 2014 p 189 Barsky 1997 p 95 McGilvray 2014 p 199 McGilvray 2014 p 210 McGilvray 2014 p 200 McGilvray 2014 pp 197 202 McGilvray 2014 pp 201 202 Gendzier 2017 p 314 Noam Chomsky 2022 A New World in Our Hearts In Conversation with Michael Albert PM Press p 59 ISBN 9781629638928 Sperlich 2006 p 97 McGilvray 2014 p 159 Chomsky on Israeli apartheid celebrity activists BDS and the one state solution Ramzy Baroud Middle East Monitor June 27 2022 Retrieved December 15 2023 Chomsky believes that calling Israeli policies towards the Palestinians apartheid is actually a gift to Israel at least if by apartheid one refers to South African style apartheid I have held for a long time that the Occupied Territories are much worse than South Africa the professor explained Noam Chomsky Israel s Actions in Palestine are Much Worse Than Apartheid in South Africa Democracy Now August 8 2014 Retrieved December 15 2023 Chomsky to i24NEWS Judeo Nazi tendencies in Israel a product of occupation i24news November 14 2018 Retrieved December 15 2023 Leibowitz warned that if the occupation continues Israeli Jews are going to turn into what he called Judeo Nazis It s a pretty strong term to use in Israel Most people couldn t get away with that but he did It will happen he argued simply by the dynamics of occupation Chomsky told i24NEWS If you have your jackboot on somebody s neck you have to find a way to justify it So you blame the victims Leibowitz s warning was a direct reflection of the continued occupation the humiliation of people the degradation and the terrorist attacks by the Israeli government We have many historical examples of that Europe has plenty of them And I think that s what you are seeing in Israel he explained Noam Chomsky Israeli Apartheid Much Worse Than South Africa IMEMC August 20 2015 Retrieved December 15 2023 Pilkington 2010 Bronner 2010 Al Jazeera 2010 Democracy Now 2010 Kalman 2014 Said Edward February 16 1984 Permission to narrate London Review of Books 06 3 Retrieved January 18 2024 Said Edward 1984 Permission to Narrate Journal of Palestine Studies 13 3 27 48 doi 10 2307 2536688 ISSN 0377 919X JSTOR 2536688 Rich Melanie S December 16 2008 10 Noam Chomsky The Controversial Jew Jews in Psychology and the Psychology of Judaism Gorgias Press pp 77 84 doi 10 31826 9781463214845 012 ISBN 978 1 4632 1484 5 retrieved December 22 2023 Rai 1995 p 20 Rai 1995 pp 37 38 McGilvray 2014 p 179 McGilvray 2014 p 178 McGilvray 2014 p 189 McGilvray 2014 p 177 McGilvray 2014 pp 179 182 McGilvray 2014 p 184 Rai 1995 p 70 Rai 1995 p 42 Chomsky 1996 p 45 Cook Christopher R 2009 A Cold Eye Assessment of US Foreign Policy It s the Policies Stupid International Studies Review 11 3 601 608 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2486 2009 00877 x ISSN 1468 2486 JSTOR 40389146 The common critique is that he is often selective about his facts to fit his theories Collier and Horowitz 2004 The sick mind of Noam Chomsky Salon September 26 2001 Archived from the original on July 28 2023 Retrieved July 28 2023 Schweizer 2006 Lott 2006 Bauerlein 2005 Kozloff 2012 Katerji Oz November 24 2017 The West s Leftist Intellectuals Who Traffic in Genocide Denial From Srebrenica to Syria Haaretz Archived from the original on March 15 2023 Retrieved July 15 2023 Zerzan John Who is Chomsky Primitivism com Archived from the original on February 21 2006 Retrieved July 28 2023 Landau 1988 McGilvray 2014 p 19 Friesen 2017 p 46 Greif 2015 p 313 Cipriani 2016 pp 44 60 Greif 2015 p 315 Barsky 1997 pp 192 195 Sperlich 2006 p 53 Otero 2003 p 416 McGilvray 2014 p 162 Barsky 1997 p 158 Sperlich 2006 p 19 Sperlich 2006 p 7 Barsky 1997 p 116 McGilvray 2014 p 230 Sperlich 2006 p 9 McGilvray 2014 p 6 Sperlich 2006 p 121 Sperlich 2006 p 69 Barsky 1997 p 199 Jaggi 2001 Barsky 1997 p 169 Barsky 1997 pp 140 141 Chomsky 1996 pp 135 136 Weiner 1995 Sperlich 2006 p 22 Democracy Now 2015 Italie Hillel June 18 2024 Noam Chomsky s wife says reports of famed linguist s death are false AP News Linguist and activist Noam Chomsky hospitalized in his wife s native country of Brazil after stroke AP News June 11 2024 Retrieved June 11 2024 Butt Maira June 10 2024 Noam Chomsky 95 no longer able to talk after famed intellectual suffered medical event The Independent Retrieved June 11 2024 Sperlich 2006 p 60 Knight 2016 p 2 Barsky 1997 p 191 Sperlich 2006 p 24 McGilvray 2014 p 5 McGilvray 2014 p 9 McGilvray 2014 pp 9 10 Lyons 1978 p 2 Sperlich 2006 p 42 MSUM Cognitive Sciences Sperlich 2006 p 39 Sipser 1997 Knuth at Stanford University 2003 Graham 2019 Harris 2010 Massey University 1996 Radick 2007 p 320 Knuth 2003 p 1 Fulton 2007 Baroni amp Callegari 1982 pp 201 218 Steedman 1984 pp 52 77 Rohrmeier 2007 pp 97 100 Babe 2015 p xvii Boden 2006 p 593 Boden 2006 p 592 Sperlich 2006 p 114 Sperlich 2006 p 129 Sperlich 2006 p 142 Barsky 1997 pp 153 154 Braun 2018 Nettelfield 2010 p 142 Corrections and clarifications The Guardian November 17 2005 ISSN 0261 3077 Archived from the original on July 12 2013 Retrieved February 21 2022 Chomsky s Genocidal Denial Congress of Bosniaks of North America August 28 2009 Archived from the original on July 28 2023 Retrieved July 28 2023 Hudson 2013 Rabbani 2012 Horowitz 2001 Kay 2011 Sperlich 2006 p 100 Cohn 1995 p 37 Sperlich 2006 p 101 Barsky 1997 p 170 Barsky 1997 pp 170 171 Weaver 2016 Sengupta 2015 Foreign Policy 2005 Cowley 2006 Jill J March 16 2020 US Peace Prize How Much Is Peace Worth Pressenza Retrieved February 2 2025 Contemporary Authors Online 2016 APS Member History American Philosophical Society Archived from the original on June 9 2021 Retrieved June 9 2021 SASA foreign membership 2003 MIT Linguistics Program 2002 Deutsche Presse Agentur 2010 British Academy 2014 Soundings 2002 Inventio Musikverlag Soundtracksforthem Interview 2005 Desmond Tutu to speak to Litndeb 2009 Honorary Members of IAPTI UoW M 2010 IEEE Xplore 2011 Erdos Number at Oakland Univ 2017 US Memorial Peace Foundation Huxley 2011 Politika 2015 IPB 2017 Pensoft bee Paez 2019 Small Body Database Lookup ssd jpl nasa gov Retrieved August 17 2024 JMI 2007 Viggo Mortensen s Spoken Word amp Music CDs SourcesAdams Tim November 30 2003 Noam Chomsky Thorn in America s side The Guardian Archived from the original on May 16 2008 Retrieved May 8 2016 Aeschimann Eric May 31 2010 Chomsky s est expose il est donc une cible designee Liberation in French Archived from the original on September 26 2012 Retrieved June 8 2010 Chomsky a ete violemment blesse du fait qu une partie des intellectuels francais aient pu le croire en accord avec Faurisson en contradiction avec tous ses engagements et toute sa vie Albert Michael 2006 Remembering Tomorrow From the politics of opposition to what we are for Seven Stories Press pp 97 99 ISBN 978 158322742 8 Allott Nick Knight Chris Smith Neil eds 2019 The Responsibility of Intellectuals Reflections by Noam Chomsky and Others after 50 years PDF London UCL Press ISBN 978 1787355514 Archived PDF from the original on September 5 2019 Retrieved September 5 2019 Antony Louise M Hornstein Norbert eds 2003 Chomsky and His Critics Malden MA Blackwell 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