ABSTRACT

This collection of essays, written between 1980 and 2001, places the search for theoretical elegance at centre stage. The author shows that although the conceptual difference between 'elegance' and the minimalist search for 'perfection' may appear to be subtle, its consequences are in fact wide ranging and radical. These considerations lead to a markedly different and novel theory of syntax where most of the major features of minimalism, such as derivation, economy, merge, move, phrases and projection, are not just reanalysed or shifted to other components but in a majority of cases are dispensed with completely or reduced to much simpler notions.
Towards an Elegant Syntax makes available important and some less easily accessible publications with new introductory material.

chapter |4 pages

INTRODUCTION

part |2 pages

PRINCIPLES AND PARAMETERS

chapter 1|10 pages

ON CIRCULAR READINGS

part |2 pages

BEYOND PRINCIPLES AND PARAMETERS

chapter 4|10 pages

ON CHOMSKY’S KNOWLEDGE OF LANGUAGE

chapter 5|6 pages

A NOTE ON THE ORGANIZATION OF THE GRAMMAR

chapter 6|22 pages

-theory and arguments

part |2 pages

TOWARDS AN ELEGANT SYNTAX

chapter 7|33 pages

PROJECTION AND PHRASE STRUCTURE

chapter 8|26 pages

PERFECT CHAINS

part |2 pages

ASPECTS OF MIRROR THEORY

chapter 11|27 pages

MIRROR THEORY

chapter 13|15 pages

WORD ORDER, RESTRUCTURING AND MIRROR THEORY