"Decoding Chomskyreads like a detective novel. So many of the arguments I found right on the mark, but I would recommend it just for the pleasure of reading Knights great English prose, particularly his talent for understatement. A truly fantastic work, simply brilliant. I could not put it down."Luc Steels, Institute for Evolutionary Biology, Barcelona
-- Luc Steele
"I can say that this is the best critique of Chomsky from the left that I have ever read. I disagree with Knight quite profoundly on a number of key issues, but in every chapter I learned something new and, in fact, found myself agreeing with him more and more as the book progressed."Frederick Newmeyer, author of The Politics of Linguistics
-- Frederick Newmeyer
"This is Chomsky from a new perspective, the perspective of a social anthropologist. It connects his science with his politics in a novel and convincing way. Knight has dug deeper and made more interconnections than anyone has done before. The result is truly revelatory."Michael Tomasello, author of A Natural History of Human Thinking
-- Michael Tomasello
"Chris Knight tells a compelling story with startling clarity and forceful elegance, about the bizarre results of studying language, that most human of faculties, by removing it as far as possible from lived human experience. He provides a persuasive explanation for Chomskys strategy that reveals striking perspectives on the relationship between science, politics and values."Marek Kohn, author of As We Know It: Coming to Terms with an Evolved Mind
-- Marek Kohn
Knights exploration of Chomskys politics, linguistics, and intellectual history is unparalleled. No other study has provided such a full understanding of Chomskys background, intellectual foibles, objectives, inconsistencies, and genius. Daniel L. Everett, author of How Language Began: The Story of Humanity's Greatest Invention
-- Daniel Everett
"Few disagree that language has been a game-changer for the human species. But just how we came by language remains hotly contested. In
Decoding Chomsky,Chris Knight strides into this minefield to bravely replace miraculous leaps and teleology with a proposal that actually makes evolutionary sense."Sarah Hrdy, author of
Mother Natureand
Mothers and Others: The Evolutionary Origins of Mutual Understanding -- Sarah Blaffer Hrdy
"This is one of the most exciting scholarly books I have read in years.
Decoding Chomsky will be required reading for anyone at all interested in the history of intellectual and political thought since the 1950s."David Golumbia, author of
The Cultural Logic of Computation -- David Golumbia
"
Decoding Chomsky . . . may be the most in-depth meditation on 'the Chomsky problem' ever published. . . . A compelling read."Tom Bartlett,
Chronicle Review -- Tom Bartlett * Chronicle Review *
"Social anthropologist Chris Knight has, almost miraculously, solved the Chomsky Problem. Ive been trying to solve it for 20 years; I now feel the euphoria that one of us has solved it.
Decoding Chomskyis an astonishingly well-written and researched volume that will probably be the most important work in the history of ideas, post World War II, that youll read for quite some time. Its so lucid and well-researched and intellectually and emotionally gripping I couldnt find a fault with it, though I tried."Michael Johnson,
Overweening Generalist -- Michael Johnson
"
Decoding Chomsky is a groundbreaking analysis of the wide chasm that now exists between modern language science and Chomskys view of language. A must-read for anyone trying to understand the history and trajectory of Chomskys ideas."Gary Lupyan, University of Wisconsin
-- Guy Lupyan
"This book provides a fascinating account of the disconnect and symmetry between Chomskys value-free science and his science-free politics. Knight roots this in the tension between Chomsky s detestation of the US military and his dependence on military funding for his linguistic research."Les Levidow, editor,
Science as Culture -- Les Levidow
"Intellectually hip and iconoclastic,
Decoding Chomskysurveys 1950s McCarthyite politics and 1960s student unrest in order to get a handle on the extraordinary influence of Noams ideas. If youre a former New Left protestor against university collaboration with the US war machine or a current 21st-century anti-war student, youll find Knights chapter on MITs historical relationship to the Pentagon titled The Most Hideous Institution On This Earth especially cutting-edge, ground-breaking and informative."Bob Feldman, Students for a Democratic Society Steering Committee (Columbia University) 1968 -- Bob Feldman
"A totally engrossing roller coaster ride. Riveting and revealing,
Decoding Chomskygives badly needed perspective to an American icon."David Wineberg, Amazon.com
-- David Wineberg
"Knight says his subversive intention is to serve justice on Chomsky the scientist without doing an injustice to Chomsky the conscience of America. Now why should that be subversive? Any voice critical of Chomsky risks being dismissed as yet another right-wing defender of political orthodoxy, but given even the most superficial examination of Knights biography one could hardly question that he supports the substance of Chomskys views (as do I). Nonetheless, he shows how Chomsky has acquiesced in more than that, has participated in and abetted a radical post-war transformation of the relation of science to society, legitimating one of the significant political achievements of the right, the pretense that science is apolitical."Bruce Nevin,
The Brooklyn Rail -- Bruce Nevin
Chris Knight is to be commended for this engaging and thought-provoking intellectual history of a thesis that remains hotly contested and the reverberations of which, as he rightly observes, resonate far beyond academia.Houman Barekat,
Times Literary Supplement -- Houman Barekat * TLS *
"Simply brilliant. The first theoretically sophisticated analysis of a chasm between mind and body, theory and practice which has become profoundly symptomatic of postmodern culture as a whole."
David Hawkes, author ofIdeology
-- David Hawkes
"History comes alive via compelling narrative . . . Knight is indeed an impressive historian when it comes to recounting the gripping personal histories behind Chomskys groundbreaking contributions to science and philosophy."Sean O'Neill,
American Ethnologist -- Sean O'Neill * American Ethnologist *
"Fascinating on so many levels, Knights critique of an academic demigod is a compelling case study of the institutional, personal, interpersonal, historical and accidental forces shaping one of the major intellectual movements of our time."Nick Enfield,author of
How We Talk: The Inner Workings of Conversation -- Nick Enfield