Avram Noam Chomsky (born 1928) is an American linguist, philosopher, and political commentator whose work has changed the study of language and who has also become one of the most widely known political writers of his generation. He was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to Jewish immigrant parents from Ukraine and Belarus. His father was a respected Hebrew scholar who taught his children to love language and books. Noam began writing about international affairs at the age of ten, in a school newspaper article about the rise of fascism in Spain. He entered the University of Pennsylvania at sixteen and studied linguistics, mathematics, and philosophy. His teacher Zellig Harris introduced him to structural linguistics and also to radical politics. In 1955 Chomsky joined the faculty of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where he remained for more than fifty years. His 1957 book Syntactic Structures changed the field of linguistics almost overnight. His ideas about how the human mind makes language possible started what is now called the cognitive revolution. From the 1960s onwards, he became as well known for his political writings as for his linguistics. He was an early and persistent critic of the Vietnam War. In 1967 he published an influential essay called The Responsibility of Intellectuals, in which he argued that educated people have a duty to tell the truth about what their governments do. He has written dozens of books on language and dozens more on politics, power, and the media. He has been arrested several times for protesting against war. In 1988 he co-wrote Manufacturing Consent with Edward Herman, a book about how mainstream media serve established power. He is one of the most cited living scholars in several fields. Some colleagues treat him as a hero; others criticise his linguistic theories, his political views, or both. His productivity has continued into his nineties. He now holds a chair at the University of Arizona.
Chomsky matters for two distinct reasons that both deserve attention. First, he transformed linguistics. Before Chomsky, most American linguists studied language by collecting recordings and analysing the sounds, words, and patterns of specific languages. This approach was careful but had a limit: it described what people said without asking how they produced an infinite variety of sentences from a limited number of rules. Chomsky asked this deeper question. A speaker of English can understand and produce sentences she has never heard before. How? His answer was that the human mind contains a system of rules — a grammar — that generates the sentences of a language. The grammar is not consciously learned; it develops in children's minds during language acquisition. All humans share some kind of universal grammar that makes any particular human language possible. This cognitive approach changed linguistics. It also contributed to the broader cognitive revolution that transformed psychology, philosophy of mind, and computer science from the 1950s onwards. Second, Chomsky is one of the most influential political writers of the past half-century. From his 1960s writings against the Vietnam War to his current work on American foreign policy, media, and power, he has sustained a body of political analysis that has reached millions of readers. His style is distinctive — heavy with facts and quotations from official sources, aimed at showing that governments often say one thing and do another. He argues that mainstream media, despite claiming independence, tend to serve the interests of governments and corporations. These two sides of his work are not entirely separate. Both rest on the conviction that humans have the capacity to understand their own situation clearly and to organise themselves freely if given the chance. His legacy is contested. His linguistic theory has been challenged by later researchers. His political views have been attacked from many directions. But his influence on both fields has been genuinely large.
John Lyons's Noam Chomsky (1970, Penguin) remains accessible despite its age.
Ideas and Ideals (2004, Cambridge) is a reliable modern introduction to both the linguistics and the politics.
Understanding Power (2002) is a wide-ranging collection of Chomsky's own public talks and interviews.
Syntactic Structures (1957) is short and historically important but technical. Aspects of the Theory of Syntax (1965) presents the classical framework. Language and Mind (1968, expanded 2006) is more accessible. For the politics: Manufacturing Consent (1988, with Edward Herman), The Responsibility of Intellectuals (1967 essay, 2017 expanded book), and Hegemony or Survival (2003) are central works. Chomsky's own Understanding Power interviews are a substantial entry point.
Chomsky's political views and his linguistics are closely connected.
Chomsky himself has repeatedly said that his political writings and his scientific work on language are largely separate. The two activities draw on some shared commitments — particularly a belief in the creative capacities of ordinary people and a scepticism about authority — but his linguistic theories do not directly support his political views, and vice versa. A supporter of his linguistics could disagree with his politics; a supporter of his politics could disagree with his linguistics. Reading the two together as a unified system misrepresents Chomsky's own position. Many of his readers focus on one side without paying much attention to the other. This is entirely legitimate. The two contributions stand or fall on separate grounds and must be evaluated separately.
Universal grammar has been proven to exist.
Universal grammar remains a hypothesis. It has been influential and has guided much research, but it has also been seriously challenged. Some researchers argue that general learning mechanisms can explain how children acquire language without needing specific innate linguistic knowledge. Others argue that the cross-linguistic similarities Chomsky cites are less striking when a wider range of languages is examined. Some specific proposals about what universal grammar contains have been abandoned over the decades. The general framework remains a major research programme, but honest presentation requires acknowledging that many questions are unsettled. Chomsky's own views have also evolved substantially over his career. The idea that universal grammar is established fact overstates the current state of knowledge.
Manufacturing Consent argues that journalists consciously lie.
The argument of Manufacturing Consent is structural, not conspiratorial. Chomsky and Herman did not claim that journalists deliberately lie or that editors conspire with governments. They identified features of how mainstream media are organised — corporate ownership, advertising dependence, reliance on official sources — that shape what gets reported, even when individual journalists are honest and well-intentioned. The structural approach is actually more challenging than a conspiracy theory because it does not depend on finding specific bad actors. It argues that the system produces certain patterns regardless of individual intentions. Understanding this distinction matters for taking the argument seriously. Dismissing it as conspiracy thinking misses what it actually claims.
Chomsky is universally respected within linguistics.
Chomsky has shaped linguistics profoundly, but his specific theories have also drawn significant criticism from other linguists. Functional linguists argue that his approach ignores how language is actually used in real communication. Cognitive linguists develop alternative frameworks that do not rely on innate linguistic knowledge. Typologists who study the variety of the world's languages sometimes find that Chomsky's proposed universals are less universal than claimed. Evolutionary linguists question his accounts of how language could have developed. These critics often acknowledge his historical importance while rejecting specific aspects of his theories. Presenting him as the single authoritative voice of modern linguistics misrepresents the state of the field. Linguistics is more diverse than such a presentation suggests.
Geoffrey Sampson's Educating Eve (1997) and The Language Instinct Debate (2005) offer substantive critical engagement with Chomsky's linguistics.
The Cultural Tool (2012) argues against universal grammar from field experience.
Robert McChesney's work extends and modifies the Herman-Chomsky framework. The journals Language, Linguistic Inquiry, and Natural Language and Linguistic Theory publish continuing scholarship in generative grammar.
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