Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Search
2000 character limit reached

Old and New Minimalism: a Hopf algebra comparison

Published 17 Jun 2023 in cs.CL, math.QA, and math.RA | (2306.10270v1)

Abstract: In this paper we compare some old formulations of Minimalism, in particular Stabler's computational minimalism, and Chomsky's new formulation of Merge and Minimalism, from the point of view of their mathematical description in terms of Hopf algebras. We show that the newer formulation has a clear advantage purely in terms of the underlying mathematical structure. More precisely, in the case of Stabler's computational minimalism, External Merge can be described in terms of a partially defined operated algebra with binary operation, while Internal Merge determines a system of right-ideal coideals of the Loday-Ronco Hopf algebra and corresponding right-module coalgebra quotients. This mathematical structure shows that Internal and External Merge have significantly different roles in the old formulations of Minimalism, and they are more difficult to reconcile as facets of a single algebraic operation, as desirable linguistically. On the other hand, we show that the newer formulation of Minimalism naturally carries a Hopf algebra structure where Internal and External Merge directly arise from the same operation. We also compare, at the level of algebraic properties, the externalization model of the new Minimalism with proposals for assignments of planar embeddings based on heads of trees.

Definition Search Book Streamline Icon: https://streamlinehq.com
References (8)
  1. R.C. Berwick, Mind the gap, in “50 Years Later: Reflections on Chomsky’s Aspects”, pp. 1–13, MITWPL, 2015.
  2. R.C. Berwick, S. Epstein, On the Convergence of ‘Minimalist’ Syntax and Categorial Grammar, in “Algebraic Methods in Language Processing 1995”, pp. 143—148, Universiteit Twente, 1995.
  3. C. Delaney, M. Marcolli, Dyson-Schwinger equations in the theory of computation, in “Feynman amplitudes, periods and motives”, pp. 79–107, Contemp. Math. 648, Amer. Math. Soc., 2015.
  4. R. Holtkamp, Rooted trees appearing in products and co-products, in “Combinatorics and physics”, 153–169, Contemp. Math., 539, Amer. Math. Soc., 2011.
  5. A. Masuoka, Quotient Theory of Hopf algebras, in (J. Bergen, S. Montgomery, Eds.), “Advances in Hopf Algebras”, Marcel Dekker, 1994, pp. 107–133.
  6. J. Michaelis, Transforming linear context free rewriting systems into minimalist grammars, in “Logical Aspects of Computational Linguistics (NY, 2001)” (P. de Groote, G. Morrill, and C. Retoré, Eds.), Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence, Vol. 2099, Springer, pp. 228–244.
  7. G.C. Rota, Baxter operators, an introduction, in (Joseph P.S.Kung, Ed.), “Gian-Carlo Rota on Combinatorics, Introductory papers and commentaries”, Birkhäuser, 1995, pp. 504–512.
  8. E.P. Stabler, Computational perspectives on minimalism, in “Oxford Handbook of Linguistic Minimalism” (C. Boeckx, ed.), Oxford University Press, 2010, 616–641.

Summary

No one has generated a summary of this paper yet.

Paper to Video (Beta)

No one has generated a video about this paper yet.

Whiteboard

No one has generated a whiteboard explanation for this paper yet.

Open Problems

We haven't generated a list of open problems mentioned in this paper yet.

Continue Learning

We haven't generated follow-up questions for this paper yet.

Collections

Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.