ABSTRACT

The Mixed Game Model claims to be comprehensive and to lay the basis for language both in general and in particular insofar as it allows us to differentiate any particular component of any language or culture within the complex whole. In this way all the issues raised by the various turning points in the history of modern linguistics can be consistently settled and also be verified by neurobiology and anthropology in a comparative theory of different languages and cultures. Addressing the complex object of human beings' actions and behaviour turns out to be an endeavour of various disciplines which can no longer search for their own truth restricted by the artificial limits of their discipline. In post-Cartesian times sociobiology, or the co-evolution of genes, mind, and culture, represents the basis of science which unites verifications by neurobiological experiments and by empirical observations of anthropology worldwide.