Mereological Syntax
By (Author) David Adger
MIT Press Ltd
MIT Press
16th December 2025
United States
General
Non Fiction
415.01
Paperback
288
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
An argument for replacing Chomsky's set-theoretic Merge view of syntax with a theory of syntax based on mereological objects. An argument for replacing Chomsky's set-theoretic Merge view of syntax with a theory of syntax based on mereological objects. Mereology is the study of parthood-what it means for one thing to be part of another. David Adger argues that a theory of syntax based on mereological objects should replace Chomsky's set-theoretic Merge view of syntax. He shows how this new perspective solves some of the problems that have bedeviled minimalism, while opening a path to a unified approach to islands, one of the central topics in theoretical syntax for the past 50 years. Adger draws on data from across many languages and from experimental work. Adger focuses on two puzzles-specifically, the so-called Labeling Problem and Copy Problem-that arise from the Merge model of syntax. He adapts ideas from mereology to build a system of phrase structure, using an operation he calls Subjoin, that solves these puzzles. He defines a simple constraint on mereological objects that he calls Angular Locality, which has wide-ranging ramifications for what constitutes a possible structure, derives successive cyclicity as a theorem, and opens a new approach to explaining why certain island phenomena behave as they do.
David Adger is Professor of Linguistics at Queen Mary University of London and a former president of the Linguistics Association of Great Britain. He is the author of Core Syntax, A Syntax of Substance (MIT Press), and Language Unlimited.