No, I'm sorry. I'm not a linguist so I only know the relation between Gold's result and linguistics second-hand. I'm more interested in it from the point of view of inductive generalisation in machine learning; that's my schtick.
Just to make sure I didn't hallucinate all that, I had an admittedly perfunctory search online and I could find this paper:
Whose introduction describes how Gold's result is considered to support the arguments for linguistic nativism from the poverty of the stimulus. Then again, the author doesn't seem to be a linguist himself and he doesn't give any more specific references, so I'm now a little worried; and your question remains un-answered.
Have you tried wading through Chomsky's early work on linguistics? I don't have the courage to. The closest I've got to is I have a friend who has read a couple of Chomsky's linguistics books. My friend is making a living as an astrologist now so maybe that's a bit of a warning there :P
Just to make sure I didn't hallucinate all that, I had an admittedly perfunctory search online and I could find this paper:
https://proceedings.neurips.cc/paper/2002/file/04ad5632029cb...
Whose introduction describes how Gold's result is considered to support the arguments for linguistic nativism from the poverty of the stimulus. Then again, the author doesn't seem to be a linguist himself and he doesn't give any more specific references, so I'm now a little worried; and your question remains un-answered.
Have you tried wading through Chomsky's early work on linguistics? I don't have the courage to. The closest I've got to is I have a friend who has read a couple of Chomsky's linguistics books. My friend is making a living as an astrologist now so maybe that's a bit of a warning there :P