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Origin of every human language

 Language Learning Forum : General discussion Post Reply
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Arekkusu
Hexaglot
Senior Member
Canada
bit.ly/qc_10_lec
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Speaks: English, French*, GermanC1, Spanish, Japanese, Esperanto
Studies: Italian, Norwegian, Mandarin, Romanian, Estonian

 
 Message 33 of 77
16 April 2011 at 8:47pm | IP Logged 
Merv wrote:
Well, for all those who are attacking the religious Tower of Babel
hypothesis and think that secular science will
provide a better answer for the diversity of languages, I have some points to make:
Why do you think the evolution of languages should be better explained through
supernatural theories rather than scientific ones? Until we've established that science
is unable to account for the data we have, it is unreasonable to evoke theories that fall
outside of the scope of the natural world.
7 persons have voted this message useful



Bao
Diglot
Senior Member
Germany
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 Message 34 of 77
16 April 2011 at 9:05pm | IP Logged 
0.) I wouldn't even call it a hypothesis, because that evokes the idea of a scientific hypothesis - and you have to subscribe to a specific set of beliefs to find the Tower of Babel explanation plausible.

1.) Language is a means of communication. It doesn't make any sense to invent a language that is more different than necessary from what people already know if you want people to learn it. More than that, anyone inventing a language can only start from what they already know. There is no independent point of view from where you could start.

2.) Varieties of what could be perceived as the same language often are so different in phonology that the average speaker of one variety has to learn how to understand the other variety. And it's a process that is relevant to the current development of language. Listen to recordings that are only 50 years old, read books that are only 100 years old. You will see the change. And 50 years, that is nothing. First-hand-experience for many people living today.

3.) 'In all likelihood' is a completely nondescript term if you do not refer to exact numbers. This discussion is not about numbers or percentages, it is about more or less adventurous beliefs. You choose what you believe, I choose what I believe.

4.) You need a population to create a language, not an individual. And it's not in your average population's best interest to invent a communication tool that is absolutely different from what the majority of the population is well-acquainted with.

5.) So you would subscribe to the idea that your average born deaf person has to be retarded, unless or until they learn how to sign?

Edited by Bao on 16 April 2011 at 9:10pm

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Merv
Bilingual Diglot
Senior Member
United States
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Studies: Spanish, French

 
 Message 35 of 77
16 April 2011 at 9:11pm | IP Logged 
Arekkusu wrote:
Merv wrote:
Well, for all those who are attacking the religious Tower of Babel
hypothesis and think that secular science will
provide a better answer for the diversity of languages, I have some points to make:
Why do you think the evolution of languages should be better explained through
supernatural theories rather than scientific ones? Until we've established that science
is unable to account for the data we have, it is unreasonable to evoke theories that fall
outside of the scope of the natural world.


Because the ex nihilo hypothesis explains human linguistic diversity far better than the gradual evolutionary
hypothesis. The examples of constructed spoken languages we have today, not to mention computer languages,
demonstrates that at this point in history, given all the communication and literacy and knowledge we have, the
human intellectual capacity at either the individual or group levels is incapable of constructing a language that
can stand alongside the natural languages in innovation or complexity.

Let us look at writing. Inventing written language is far simpler than inventing spoken language. We sometimes
have to laugh at the thought that our ancestors didn't come upon it on their own (well, the ancestors of most of
us, that is) but usually had to have their writing system imported from others who were literate. It seems so
obvious that writing is useful and so trivial to construct an alphabet or even a logographic writing system.

And yet, writing arose at most five times independently: Mesopotamian cuneiform, Indus Harrapan script,
Egyptian hieroglyphs, Chinese characters, and Mesoamerican Olmec-Zapotec scripts. And even then, we have no
proof that two of the first three I listed did not arise as a result of an imported concept (e.g. Mesopotamian
writing introducing the concept of writing, if not the actual script, into India and Egypt). So it is possible that
there were only three independent cases: China, Mesoamerica, and a Middle East-India-Egypt continuum.

So if writing arose only 3-5 times independently in history, what makes you so confident that something far
more complex, like spoken language, could have arisen dozens of times independently?

Another point: the notion that reason requires rejection of religion is nonsense. Reason may operate on any kind
of information: observation, sensation, revelation, etc. There is nothing intrinsic in reason that dictates that to be
consistent we must only work with what we observe ourselves.

After all, you, Arekkusu, accept and work with many ideas and facts/"facts" that you only believe to be true based
on the statements and records of others. You choose to reject God and His revelation, and I choose to accept
Him. That's the only difference. Otherwise, we both use reason to work our way through what we firmly believe to
be true to arrive at our conclusions.
3 persons have voted this message useful



Juаn
Senior Member
Colombia
Joined 5346 days ago

727 posts - 1830 votes 
Speaks: Spanish*

 
 Message 36 of 77
16 April 2011 at 9:26pm | IP Logged 
Bao wrote:
0.) I wouldn't even call it a hypothesis, because that evokes the idea of a scientific hypothesis - and you have to subscribe to a specific set of beliefs to find the Tower of Babel explanation plausible.


Any possible statement rests upon implicit presuppositions.

~~~~~~~~~~

Here is an interesting article on the subject of the relationship between languages.
2 persons have voted this message useful



Merv
Bilingual Diglot
Senior Member
United States
Joined 5274 days ago

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Speaks: English*, Serbo-Croatian*
Studies: Spanish, French

 
 Message 37 of 77
16 April 2011 at 9:30pm | IP Logged 
0.) Strictly speaking, neither the secular nor the religious offer a hypothesis. Neither is currently testable. We are
looking at history and trying to make sense of it, so these are not scientific hypotheses. They are the sort of
rationalizations a historian might make. I called the Tower of Babel a hypothesis because it is fully equal to your
secular explanations, which is to say, they are on an equal footing. Neither are scientific hypotheses, but rather
rationalizations or explanations of history. One is based on the belief that God has revealed the explanation. The
other is based on the belief that God cannot be part of the explanation and that therefore we must use solely the
material to explain the origin of languages.

1.) Your counterargument only strengthens my point. It suggests that independent language families must have
arisen from people who could not communicate other than by gestures who therefore did not have biases as to
which kind of grammar they would come up with.

2.) I don't understand how this differs from what I said. Phonology is not that important, nor is even lexicon.
Grammar is the problem here.

3.) Yes, because to be clear there haven't been any professional linguists and mathematicians who have tried to
link up all language families into a universal family. They have. They've even used computers to do it. They have
failed. There is nothing to indicate a common ancestor between Basque and Tzotzil and Farsi and Japanese, other
than perhaps the sounds they use and the most basic concepts they have (agency, action, the object of agency,
etc.). The onus is not on me to do the math, but on the secular linguists to do it. And better yet, tell us what that
original proto-language was like. Was its grammar more like that of Cherokee or of Xhosa or of Malayalam?

4.) Again, your argument here just supports what I was saying. People who already speak a language have no
incentive to invent a new one. Therefore, you are suggesting that new language families were invented by
grunters, mutes, and gesticulators.

5.) Children who were abandoned before they learned how to speak ARE retarded. Read about feral children.
Obviously, that situation does not recapitulate what we are talking about above. That would be about 20 babies
left in the wild (none of them hearing a word of human language), living together (thus having some sort of
society), and then we could see what sort of language they would come up with. My suspicion is not much.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feral_child

Quote:
In reality, feral children lack the basic social skills which are normally learned in the process of
enculturation. For example, they may be unable to learn to use a toilet, have trouble learning to walk upright and
display a complete lack of interest in the human activity around them. They often seem mentally impaired and
have almost insurmountable trouble learning a human language. The impaired ability to learn language after
having been isolated for so many years is often attributed to the existence of a critical period for language
learning, and taken as evidence in favor of the critical period hypothesis.[4]


Edited by Merv on 16 April 2011 at 9:33pm

1 person has voted this message useful



tractor
Tetraglot
Senior Member
Norway
Joined 5454 days ago

1349 posts - 2292 votes 
Speaks: Norwegian*, English, Spanish, Catalan
Studies: French, German, Latin

 
 Message 38 of 77
16 April 2011 at 9:55pm | IP Logged 
Merv wrote:
The examples of constructed spoken languages we have today, not to mention computer
languages, demonstrates that at this point in history, given all the communication and literacy and knowledge we
have, the human intellectual capacity at either the individual or group levels is incapable of constructing a
language that can stand alongside the natural languages in innovation or complexity.

Most constructed languages and computer languages have been designed to be simple and easy to learn and
use. They have not been designed to compete with natural languages in neither innovation nor complexity. They
have been designed to help solve problems. It is relatively easy to construct a language that is easier to learn
than most natural languages. It is also relatively easy to construct a machine that performs certain tasks better
than human beings. If someone tries to construct a language that can compete with natural languages in
complexity, the language will most likely be a failure. If someone tries to create a robot that is as complex as a
human being they will most likely fail. That neither proves nor disapproves the existence of God.

Merv wrote:
After all, you, Arekkusu, accept and work with many ideas and facts/"facts" that you only believe
to be true based on the statements and records of others. You choose to reject God and His revelation, and I
choose to accept Him. That's the only difference. Otherwise, we both use reason to work our way through what
we firmly believe to be true to arrive at our conclusions.

True, but it is an important difference. To those of us not believing in God, any explanation based upon his
revelation is invalid (because we do not believe in Him in the first place). So, we either need an alternative
explanation or you must convert us to your religion.
2 persons have voted this message useful



Merv
Bilingual Diglot
Senior Member
United States
Joined 5274 days ago

414 posts - 749 votes 
Speaks: English*, Serbo-Croatian*
Studies: Spanish, French

 
 Message 39 of 77
16 April 2011 at 10:02pm | IP Logged 
tractor wrote:
Merv wrote:
The examples of constructed spoken languages we have today, not to mention
computer
languages, demonstrates that at this point in history, given all the communication and literacy and knowledge we
have, the human intellectual capacity at either the individual or group levels is incapable of constructing a
language that can stand alongside the natural languages in innovation or complexity.

Most constructed languages and computer languages have been designed to be simple and easy to learn and
use. They have not been designed to compete with natural languages in neither innovation nor complexity. They
have been designed to help solve problems. It is relatively easy to construct a language that is easier to learn
than most natural languages. It is also relatively easy to construct a machine that performs certain tasks better
than human beings. If someone tries to construct a language that can compete with natural languages in
complexity, the language will most likely be a failure. If someone tries to create a robot that is as complex as a
human being they will most likely fail. That neither proves nor disapproves the existence of God.

Merv wrote:
After all, you, Arekkusu, accept and work with many ideas and facts/"facts" that you only believe
to be true based on the statements and records of others. You choose to reject God and His revelation, and I
choose to accept Him. That's the only difference. Otherwise, we both use reason to work our way through what
we firmly believe to be true to arrive at our conclusions.

True, but it is an important difference. To those of us not believing in God, any explanation based upon his
revelation is invalid (because we do not believe in Him in the first place). So, we either need an alternative
explanation or you must convert us to your religion.


First part: I mostly agree, although arguably the creators of artistic languages (e.g. Tolkien) would be motivated
to create a language that could stand its ground alongside natural language, given that they had gone to the
effort of creating one in the first place. And secondly, creating a complex language that can stand alongside
natural language would be of theoretical interest and, particularly historically-speaking if not so much today, of
use in encryption and espionage. The fact that the US used Navajo speaking code-talkers during WWII
demonstrates quite easily that the artificial encryptions of the time could not come even close. So I would
suggest that this is more a matter of capacity than of motivation.

Second part: I agree entirely. But the onus is on you to provide a good explanation using only material processes
that can compete with the ex nihilo/creation explanation. You're free to provide one. But before you do (and I am
not addressing you personally but the whole group on this forum that seems to scoff at religious explanations
out of hand), do not be so flippant as to dismiss someone else's rationalization which logically is fully capable of
explaining the evidence. The assumptions and beliefs you may reject, but condescension is absurd when you
have no better explanation.

Edited by Merv on 16 April 2011 at 10:03pm

1 person has voted this message useful



akprocks
Senior Member
United States
Joined 5287 days ago

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Speaks: English*
Studies: German

 
 Message 40 of 77
16 April 2011 at 10:03pm | IP Logged 
Merv wrote:

5.) Children who were abandoned before they learned how to speak ARE retarded. Read about feral children.
Obviously, that situation does not recapitulate what we are talking about above. That would be about 20 babies
left in the wild (none of them hearing a word of human language), living together (thus having some sort of
society), and then we could see what sort of language they would come up with. My suspicion is not much.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feral_child
                             


read this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicaraguan_Sign_Language




2 persons have voted this message useful



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