Saturday, July 30, 2016
An introduction to Language and History of Languages
An
introduction to Language and History of Languages
The Tower of Babel—and
Universal Language
The Brain’s Language
Centers—Created by God
Friday, July 29, 2016
Anatomy of Speech and Complexity of Language—Uniquely Human
Anatomy of Speech
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Figure 3. Posterior view of the larynx opening into the pharynx (‘tube within a tube’). |
The specific mechanics involved in speaking
have anatomical requirements that are found primarily in humans (the exception
being angels—1 Cor. 13:1; Rev. 5:2; and also birds—although they produce sound
differently). There is no animal living presently, nor has one been
observed in the fossil record, that possesses anything close to the ‘voice box’
(as we commonly call it) present in humans. As information scientist
Werner Gitt observed in his fascinating book, The Wonder of Man:
‘Only man has the gift of speech, a
characteristic otherwise only possessed by God. This separates us clearly
from the animal kingdom ... In addition to the necessary “software” for speech,
we have also been provided with the required “hardware”.’
Furthermore, the complete lack of any
‘transitional’ animal form (with the requisite speech hardware) in the fossil
record poses a significant continuity problem for evolutionists. As
Deacon noted:
‘This lack of precedent makes language
a problem for biologists. Evolutionary explanations are about biological
continuity, so a lack of continuity limits the use of the comparative method in
several important ways. We can’t ask, “What ecological variable
correlates with increasing language use in a sample species?” Nor can we
investigate the ‘neurological correlates of increased language complexity.’
There is no range of species to include in our analysis.
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Figure 4. The complex design and multiple components necessary for speech argue strongly against an evolutionary origin. |
To simplify the anatomy required for human speech by using an analogy, think of a small tube resting inside a larger tube (see Figure 3). The inner tube consists of the trachea going down to the lungs, and the larynx (which houses the voice box). At the larynx, the inner tube opens out to the larger tube, which is known as the pharynx. It not only carries sound up to the mouth, but it also carries food and water from the mouth down to the stomach. A rather simplistic description of how humans utter sounds in speech can be characterized by the control of air generated by the lungs, flowing through the vocal tract, vibrating over the vocal cord, filtered by facial muscle activity, and released out of the mouth and nose. Just as sound is generated from blowing air across the narrow mouth of a bottle, air is passed over the vocal cords, which can be tightened or relaxed to produce various resonances.
The physiological components
necessary can be divided into: (1) supralaryngeal vocal tract; (2) larynx; and
(3) subglottal system (see Figure 4). In
1848, Johannes Muller demonstrated that human speech involved the modulation of
acoustic energy by the airway above the larynx (referred to as the
supralaryngeal tract). Sound energy for
speech is generated in the larynx at the vocal folds. The subglottal system—which consists of the
lungs, trachea, and their associated muscles—provides the necessary power for
speech production. The lungs produce the
initial air pressure that is essential for the speech signal; the pharyngeal
cavity, oral cavity, and nasal cavity shape the final output sound that is
perceived as speech. This is the primary
anatomy used in common speech, aside from those sounds produced by varying the
air pressure in the pharynx or constricting parts of the oral cavity.
Complexity of Language—Uniquely Human
No known language
in the whole of human history can be considered ‘primitive’ in any sense of the
word. In her book, What is Linguistics? Suzette Elgin wrote:
‘the
most ancient languages for which we have written texts—Sanskrit for example—are
often far more intricate and complicated in their grammatical forms than many
other contemporary languages.
The late Lewis
Thomas, a distinguished physician, scientist, and longtime director and chancellor
of the Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in Manhattan, acknowledged: ‘ ...Language
is so incomprehensible a problem that the language we use for discussing the
matter is itself becoming incomprehensible’. It appears that, from the
beginning, human communication was designed with a tremendous amount of
complexity and forethought, and has allowed us to communicate not only with one
another, but also with the Designer of language.
In a paper titled
‘Evolution of Universal Grammar’ that appeared in the January 2001 issue of Science,
M.A. Nowak and his colleagues attempted to discount the gulf that separates
human and animals. This paper, which was a continuation of a 1999 paper titled
‘The Evolution of Language used mathematical calculations in an effort to predict
the evolution of grammar and the rules surrounding it. While Nowak and
his team inferred that the evolution of universal grammar can occur via natural
selection, they freely admitted that ‘the question concerning why only
humans evolved language is hard to answer’ [emphasis added]. Hard to answer
indeed! The mathematical models presented in these papers do not tell us
anything about the origination of the multitude of languages used in the world
today. If man truly did evolve from an ape-like ancestor, how did the
phonologic [the branch of linguistics that deals with the sounds of speech and
their production] component of our languages become so diverse and
variegated? Nowak’s paper also did not clarify the origination of written
languages, or describe how the language process was initiated in the first
humans, considering we know today that parents teach languages to their
offspring.
Also, consider
that when language first appears on the scene, it already is fully developed
and very complex. The late Harvard paleontologist George Gaylord Simpson
described it this way:
‘Even
the peoples with least complex cultures have highly sophisticated languages,
with complex grammar and large vocabularies, capable of naming and discussing
anything that occurs in the sphere occupied by their speakers. The oldest
language that can be reconstructed is already modern, sophisticated, complete
from an evolutionary point of view.
Chomsky summed it
up well when he stated:
‘Human
language appears to be a unique phenomenon, without significant analogue in the
animal world ... There is no reason to suppose that the ‘gaps’ are
bridgeable. There is no more of a basis for assuming an evolutionary
development from breathing to walking.
My own view is that language developed much more gradually, starting with the
gestures of apes, then gathering momentum as the bipedal hominids
evolved. The appearance of the larger-brained genus Homo some 2
million years ago may have signaled the emergence and later development of
syntax, with vocalizations providing a mounting refrain. What may have
distinguished Homo sapiens was the final switch from a mixture of
gestural and vocal communication to an autonomous vocal language, embellished
by gesture but not dependent on it.
Thursday, July 28, 2016
What is language?
Language
Definitions
Language is the human capacity for acquiring and
using complex systems of communication, and a language is
any specific example of such a system. The scientific study of language is
called linguistics. Any estimate of the
precise number of languages in the world depends on a partly arbitrary distinction
between languages and dialects. However, estimates vary
between 6,000 and 7,000 languages in number. Natural
languages
are spoken or signed, but any language can be encoded into secondary media using
auditory, visual, or tactile stimuli, for example, in graphic writing, braille, or whistling. This is because human
language is modality-independent. When used as a general concept,
"language" may refer to the cognitive ability to learn and use
systems of complex communication, or to describe the set of rules that makes up
these systems, or the set of utterances that can be produced from those rules.
All languages rely on the process of semiosis to relate signs with particular meanings. Oral and sign languages contain a phonological system that governs how
symbols are used to form sequences known as words or morphemes, and a syntactic system that governs how
words and morphemes are combined to form
phrases and utterances.
A
language is a medium of communication which is must be meaning full and follow
a systematic way for talk and write by
people
Language
from different perspectives:
•
Divine: Language
is God’s gift to mankind; God gave Adam the power to name all things.
•
Literary: “Language
is the armoury of the human mind, and at once contains the trophies of its past
and the weapons of its future conquest”
---- Samuel Taylor Coleridge
•
Philosophical: “Language
is the outward manifestation of human spirit”
----- Humboldt
•
Social: Language
is a system of verbal and sometimes written representations that are culturally
specific and convey meaning about the world.
•
Anthropological:
Language a primary means of communication which is transmitted through
learning, as part of enculturation.
so, A language is a medium of communication which is must be meaning full and follow a systematic way for talk and write by people.
so, A language is a medium of communication which is must be meaning full and follow a systematic way for talk and write by people.
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
Human and Animal Language
Human and Animal Language
Human language is unique because it has the
properties of productivity, recursivity, and displacement, and because it relies
entirely on social convention and learning. Its complex structure therefore
affords a much wider range of possible expressions and uses than any known
system of animal
communication.
Language is thought to have originated when early hominins started gradually changing
their primate communication systems, acquiring the ability to form a theory of other minds and a shared intentionality.
This development is sometimes thought to have
coincided with an increase in brain volume, and many linguists see the
structures of language as having evolved to serve specific communicative and
social functions. Language is processed in many different locations in the human brain, but especially in Broca’s and Wernicke’s areas. Humans acquire language through social
interaction in early childhood, and children generally speak fluently when they
are approximately three years old. The use of language is deeply entrenched in
human culture. Therefore, in addition to
its strictly communicative uses, language also has many social and cultural
uses, such as signifying group identity, social
stratification,
as well as for social grooming and entertainment.
Languages evolve and diversify over time,
and the history of their evolution can be reconstructed by comparing modern languages to
determine which traits their ancestral languages must have had in order for the
later stages to have occurred. A group of languages that descend from a common
ancestor is known as a language family. The languages that are
most spoken in the world today belong to the Indo-European
family,
which includes languages such as English, Spanish, Portuguese, Russian, and Hindi; the Sino-Tibetan
languages,
which include Mandarin Chinese, Cantonese, and many others; Semitic languages, which include Arabic, Amharic, and Hebrew; and the Bantu languages, which include Swahili, Zulu, Shona, and hundreds of other
languages spoken throughout Africa. The general consensus is
that between 50 and 90% of languages spoken today will probably have become
extinct by the year 2100
Tuesday, July 26, 2016
Characteristics of Language
Characteristics
of Language
Language is a medium of
communication which is –
- systematic
- symbolic
- arbitrary
- dual
- productive
- dynamic
- contextual
- used to express displacement
- unique to humans
- learnt & transmitted
1. Systematic
2. Symbolic
3. Arbitrary
4. Duality
5. Productive: finite brain, infinite utterances
6. Dynamic
7. Contextual
8. Displacement: language can refer to things
that are displaced spatially or temporally
9. Learned and transmitted
10. Unique to human
beings
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