What counts as evidence in linguistics?: an introduction
Anette Rosenbach, Martina Penke
págs. 480-526
Typological evidence and universal grammar
Frederick J. Newmeyer
págs. 527-548
Remarks on the realtion between language typology and universal grammar: commentary on Newmeyer
Mark Baltin
págs. 549-553
Does lingustic explanation presuppose linguistic description?
Martin Haspelmath
págs. 554-579
Remarks on description and explanation in grammar: commentary on Haspelmath
Judith Aissen, Joan Bresnan
págs. 580-583
Martin Haspelmath
págs. 584-586
From UG to universals: linguistic adaptation through iterated learning
Simon Kirby, Henry Brighton, Kenny Smith
págs. 587-607
Form, meaning and speakers in the evolution of language: commentary on Kirby, Smith and Brighton
William Croft
págs. 608-611
Simon Kirby, Henry Brighton, Kenny Smith
págs. 612-614
Dieter Wunderlich
págs. 615-641
What kind of evidence could refute the UG hypothesis?: commentary on Wunderlich
Michael Tomasello
págs. 642-645
Author's response: is there any evidence that refutes the UG hypothesis?
Dieter Wunderlich
págs. 646-647
A question of relevance: some remarks on standard languages
Helmut Weib
págs. 648-674
The relevance of variation: remarks on Weib's standard-dialect-problem
Horst J. Simon
págs. 675-679
Helmut Weib
págs. 680-681
págs. 682-703
"Internal" versus "external" universals: commentary on Eckman
Lydia White
págs. 704-706
Author's response: "external" universals and explanation in SLA
Fred R. Eckman
págs. 707-709
págs. 710-740
Abstraction and perfomance: commentary on Fischer
David W. Lightfoot
págs. 741-744
Olga Fischer
págs. 745-747