Abstract
Jerry Fodor has claimed to have a solution to the traditional problem of what comes
first, thought or language. Compositionality, he says, will give us the answer, for at least one must
be compositional, and if only one of them is, that is the one that has underived semantic
content. He argues that natural languages are not compositional, and therefore that the
content of language is derived from the content of thought. I will argue that the idea that
language is not compositional conflicts with his productivity and systematicity arguments for
the existence of a language of thought. I will also show that Fodor’s solution to the problem
fails, as his main argument is circular. Finally, I suggest that Fodor’s argument against the
compositionality of language is not decisive, and that we can still attribute at least some
degree of compositionality to language.