Any suggestions for reading Chomsky?
I haven't read him before and am looking for any suggestions on where to start? I'd like to ease into it
Syntactic Structures
His review of Verbal Behavior
Language and Mind
his politics is boring and meaningless
Manufacturing Consent
read michael parenti instead
>>9696289
/thread
I mean this politics are interesting and a good look into a part of the left. At least they serve as points which may be refuted. From what I've read his stuff on the media might be of use to some on the right as well.
>>9696568
>At least they serve as points which may be refuted.
Go do that then. Fine someone who can refute them. Because while a ton of people talk about doing this, I've seen few who had any actual success.
>>9696653
> Because while a ton of people talk about doing this, I've seen few who had any actual success.
This is what i hear quite a lot too (especially on here) but have yet to see it demonstrated
Chomsky remains pretty salient and pretty on point
I remember when lefty/pol/ kept its noise out of /lit/. Those were the days.
>>9696694
oh shut up u dullard
>>9696694
And I remember when plain old /pol/ would inject their politics into every single thread they could find, whether it was relevant to the conversation or not. That's every day.
>>9696920
Every day until you bookcucks stop reading books and get on the redpill.
>>9696927
ssshhhhh child
>>9696285
reddit is that way
>>9696914
>u
>dullard
Who're you trying to convince
He is great at linguistics... but liguistics are fucking boring. Read his political books instead.
>>9696999
trips of truth
Noam Chomsky made a career on writing the same book over and over again, so draw straws.