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A Note on Uniqueness

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 April 2026

Karl V. Teeter*
Affiliation:
Harvard University

Extract

In a much cited and little appreciated paper, Y. R. Chao more than thirty years ago anticipated the logic-inspired position of Noam Chomsky that mechanical discovery procedures are not a realistic goal for linguistic analysis. Here I look briefly at a familiar problem in the analysis of English in an attempt to underline some relations of unique and nonunique analyses.

The problem is that of the relation of traditional long and short vowels in modern American English, and for paradigm I shall consider only the vocalic nucleus of beat vs. that of bit (with a sidelong glance at the word dear). But first it is necessary to dispose of a straw man, without which the matter cannot even be discussed as a problem. In currently fashionable terms, this straw man might be named the ‘strong non-uniqueness position’, and taken to hold that no criteria can POSSIBLY be adduced to prefer one solution over another: it is all a matter of taste.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1966 Linguistic Society of America

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