To answer this philosophically...
Some people believe that the ability to learn is innate, which means that concepts such as maths, language etc. are already present in you before you're born. So a Rationalist would say that you are born with the ability to learn, perhaps even before you are born.
The other side of this argument, the empiricists believe that there are no innate ideas and that your mind is born as a blank slate with no knowledge or ideas. So you learn from experience.
Babies are born with the ability to learn any language, but their ability to learn multiple languages depends on exposure to those languages. Babies raised in multilingual environments are more likely to learn multiple languages.
The Language Acquisition Device (LAD) is a theoretical concept introduced by Noam Chomsky to explain how children have an innate ability to acquire language. According to Chomsky, children are born with a cognitive mechanism that allows them to quickly and effortlessly learn the grammar and rules of any language they are exposed to during their critical period of language development.
Everyone is born with the ability to cry. It is not something you learn. It is a basic bodily function that (nearly) everyone can do.
Nope - the hunt instinctively. They are born with the ability to search out prey.
Yes, babies are born with the ability to learn any language. They have the capacity to acquire any language they are exposed to during their early years, as their brains are highly adaptable and receptive to language input.
It was a natural instinct. saiyans are BORN with the ability to take flight.
a language acquistion device
Because they are trying to learn from right to wrong. Children are not meant to be born perfect.
No, since they are not born with the understanding that there are other people. However, people are born with the capacity to learn interpersonal skills, which they must do when they are quite young. Children who grew to their teens without having other people around them cannot be taught interpersonal skills, because they are too old. Some conditions, like autism, can seriously impair a person's ability to learn such skills, and obviously, some people learn them better and more thoroughly than others.
Chomsky's theory of language acquisition, known as Universal Grammar, suggests that humans are born with an innate ability to understand and produce language. He proposed that children are genetically predisposed to acquire language and that this ability is triggered by exposure to language in their environment. Chomsky believed that there are universal rules and structures that underlie all languages, which children intuitively grasp as they learn to speak.
Human beings are born with an innate ability to learn language; we are preprogrammed to acquire any language we are sufficiently exposed to before puberty. By listening and discerning meaning from context, children quickly pick up passive language skills by age 1, and from there acquire language at a break-neck pace so that by age 4 most children speak their native languages with full native fluency.
Behaviorist theory posits that language is acquired through imitation, reinforcement, and conditioning. Nativist theory argues that language acquisition is an innate capacity, with children born with an inherent ability to learn and develop language skills.