Thursday, December 18, 2008

Languages and Mammals!

The Language Instinct: How the Mind Creates Language (Perennial Classics) The Language Instinct: How the Mind Creates Language by Steven Pinker

I can't help but wowing each time I read this book. The range, the depth, the exactness, the details and finally the clarity with which the author describes the languages just goes beyond imagination. Or maybe what fascinates me is the real dimensions of this phenomenon called "language" which unfolds itself by each explanation, comparison or intuition.

In the chapter called: "The Tower of Babel" (p.238-239), he most admirably and point to pointedly compares the diversity of languages to the diversity of mammals as a sub-specie descendants of animals. There is one and only one universal language from which all the other languages of the world come from. The grammar of this universal language is innately curved into our brains and is what we call the language instinct. Just as the mammals have a number of unchangeable shared characteristics among them, so do the languages.They all have subjects, verbs, objects; they all possess derivatives (to form new words) and inflections (to fit a word into its role in a sentence); they all deal with flexible and non-flexible word positions in a sentence and so on and so forth.

Through the centuries as the humans evolve (Darwinism), so do the languages of the world, getting its stamina or substance from three phenomena:innovation, learning and immigration. People of different cultures most strongly identify themselves with the language they speak. They evolve and they make the language evolve accordingly.

WOw...

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