Bartering old stone tools: When did communicative ability and conceptual structure begin to interact?

Behavioral and Brain Sciences 18 (1):203-204 (1995)
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Abstract

Wilkins & Wakefield are clearly right to separate linguistic capacity from communicative ability, if only because other animal species have one without the other. But I question the abruptness of the demarcation they make between a period when hominids evolved enriched conceptual representation for other reasons entirely, and a subsequent later stage when language use became an adaptation.

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