origins of language

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THE ORIGINS OF LANGUAGE LCD 101: Intro to Language Fall 2011 Ryan

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Page 1: Origins of language

THE ORIGINS OF LANGUAGE

LCD 101: Intro to LanguageFall 2011

Ryan

Page 2: Origins of language

Overview

•Where did language come from?•Did all humans always speak? • When did language evolve?•Why?•Was there more than one original language? •What is the Language Acquisition Device?•Did it evolve as humans evolved?

Page 3: Origins of language

The Theories

•Divine creation• Natural evolution•Invention/imitation hypotheses:•“ding-dong” hypothesis•“pooh-pooh” hypothesis•“bow-wow” hypothesis•“ta-ta” hypothesis

Page 4: Origins of language

Necessity Theories of Language Invention

• Warning hypothesis•“yo-he-ho” hypothesis• Lying hypothesis

Page 5: Origins of language

Divine Creation of Language Many societies throughout history believed

that language is a gift of the gods to humans: Genesis 2:20 “Adam gave names to all living

creatures.” Humans were created from the start with an innate capacity to use language.

This capacity is complex – there are NO PRIMITIVE LANGUAGES!! Nor have there ever been – even among the most remote tribes today or of stone-age hunter-gatherers!

Page 6: Origins of language

Natural Evolution Hypothesis Humans evolved a Language Acquisition Device

. The simple vocalizations and gestures inherited from our primitive ancestors quickly gave way to a creative system of language – perhaps in a single generation or two due to a genetic mutation that produced advantageous results.

One theory suggests this perhaps gave Homo sapiens an advantage over Homo neatherthalis, whose vocalizations were limited by a less developed vocal tract. Studies of Neanderthal skulls indicate that they were only able to produce fricative sounds, like /f/ and /v/.

“Homo loquens” – the speaking human!

Page 7: Origins of language

Invention Hypotheses

“Ding-Dong” – humans named objects, actions and phenomena after a recognizable sound associated with it. The first human words were a type of ICON, a sign whose form is an exact image of its meaning:

Boom = explosion (English)Tun-tun = heart (Chinook Indian)Ai-ai = knife (Basque, literally “ouch-

ouch”)

Page 8: Origins of language

Invention Hypotheses

“bow-wow” – human vocabulary developed from animal noises, e.g., Moo, hiss, quack, meow, etc.

Onomatopoeia: lit. “name-sound” the imitation of a sound in naming.

Drawbacks: Limited part of vocabulary. Different from language to language: Russian ba-bakh = bang; bukh = thud

Page 9: Origins of language

Invention Hypotheses

“pooh-pooh” Hypothesis: humans’ first words were derived from spontaneous expressions of dislike, hunger, pain, or pleasure.

Ha-ha-ha, wah-wah Problems: Very small part of any language. Differ from language to language: English ouch; Russian oi; Cherokee eee,

Basque aiMade with intake of breath, which is the

opposite of normal talking.

Page 10: Origins of language

Invention Hypotheses

Renditions of animal sounds differ considerably from language to language, even though the animal makes essentially the same sound:

Dog: bow-wow; Chinese wu-wu; Jap. wan-wan; Russian gaf-gaf or tyaff-tyaff

Cat: meow; Russian myaoo; Chinese mao; Japanese nya-nya

Rooster: cocka-doodle-do; Japanese kokekoko; Greek kikuriku, kikikiriki

PROBLEM: Where do names for natural noiseless concepts come from: rock, sun, sky, love????

Page 11: Origins of language

Invention Hypotheses

“ta-ta” Hypothesis. Charles Darwin theorized that speech may have developed as a sort of mouth pantomime – the organs of speech were used to imitate the gestures of the hand. The first words were lip icons of hand gestures.

Same problem as for onomatopoeia – different gestures in different cultures: crossing fingers for good luck in English versus Russian “fig” gesture; nodding “no” in Greek versus “yes” in English

Even Darwin himself thought this was a little implausible.

Page 12: Origins of language

Necessity Hypotheses

“Necessity is the mother of invention” Warning Hypothesis. Language

evolved from the warning signals used by animals. Perhaps language started with a warning sound to others, that signified “HELP!” or “RUN!” to alert other members to the approach of a lumbering hairy mammoth or hungry saber-tooth tiger.

Other first words could have been hunting instructions.

Page 13: Origins of language

Necessity Hypotheses

“yo-he-ho” Hypothesis: Language developed on the basis of human cooperation.

The earliest language was chanting to stimulate collective effort, like moving a great stone to block off a cave entrance from roving carnivores, or repeating a war phrase over and over to inflame the fighting spirit.

Poetry and song came to us this way – and we still have some “yo-he-ho” ones: the Volga Boat Song, Military drill chanting, the Seven Dwarves working song!

Page 14: Origins of language

Necessity Hypotheses

The “Lying” Hypothesis: Sturtevant argued that since all our real intentions or emotions get involuntarily expressed by gesture, look, or sound, voluntary communication must have been invented in order to lie or deceive. He believed that the need to deceive and lie – to use language in contrast to reality for selfish ends – was the social prompting that got language started.

Seems pretty far-fetched.

Page 15: Origins of language

The Real Reason For Language

Page 16: Origins of language

Other Sources of Language

More on the divine source: Psammetichus and the babies raised by goats.

Ba-ba? King James of Scotland and the Hebrew-

speaking babies. But empirical evidence from children raised

without exposure to language shows that these children grow up with no language at all. Exposure to language before the age of 7 is critical to language development. This is called The Critical Period for language acquisition

Page 17: Origins of language

Other Sources of Language

Physical Adaptation. Other primates, such as gorillas, do not have the same physical characteristics which make speech possible.

upright teeth in humans (fricative sounds)

Intricate lip muscles on humans Smaller, thicker more muscular

tongue Humans can close off the nose to

create more air pressure for sound in the mouth cavity.

Page 18: Origins of language

Other Sources of Language

The human larynx, or “voice box,” which contains the vocal cords, is in a lower position in humans than in primates, creating a longer cavity called the pharynx.

The pharynx is like a big echo chamber above the vocal cords for volume and clarity of sound.

Unfortunate outcome: we can now choke on food. Monkeys can both breathe and drink or eat at the same time – we can’t. So can babies until their larynx drops as they mature.

Page 19: Origins of language

Other Sources of Language

The tool-making source: As early humans’ hands became occupied with tool use, they were less able to use hand gestures, so speech became a necessity

Preferential right-handedness Lateralized brain: each hemisphere

has its own functions Speech and tool-making abilities are

very close to one another in the left hemisphere

Page 20: Origins of language

Other Sources of Language

The Genetic Source: a crucial genetic mutation arose which gave humans the unique ability to produce and understand language. This means that language is

Innate Hard-wired like in a computer Pre-programmed Universal in form The innateness hypothesis states that language is

endemic to all humans. But only to humans? We will explore this next week.

Page 21: Origins of language

Hypotheses Regarding Language Diversity

• Was there one or more than one original language? •Was there one or more than one “invention” of language?•There are approximately 6,300 languages spoken on earth now, and an even greater number spoken in the past

Page 22: Origins of language

Linguistic Diversity

Language is a relatively recent phenomena: Early humans first appeared 150,00 years

ago Language first appeared 50,000 years ago All of the original first languages have

disappeared Many more languages were spoken in the

past because humans lived in small tribes (lots of different languages) rather than in large states (with one common language)

Page 23: Origins of language

Linguistic Diversity

Monogenesis: mono = “one” genesis = “birth”There was a single, original language spoken by a single

group of Homo sapiens as early as 50,000 years ago which gave rise to all human languages spoken on earth today.

The Mother Tongue Hypothesis – this original language diverged through time and distance to form many different languages. All of today’s languages descended from this one language.

Out of Africa Theory – General theory of human origin arising in Africa; language may have arisen here as well.

Page 24: Origins of language

Linguistic Diversity Myths Many cultures have stories about how the first

language became many languages:

The Tower of Babel (Genesis, Judeo-Christian)

The Toltec Pyramid of Cholula (Pre-Columbian Mexico)

Basque scholars claim Basque is the first language; a Swedish scholar claims Swedish was spoken in the Garden of Eden. A German scholar from the 18th century believed German was the proto-language. See a pattern?

Page 25: Origins of language

Linguistic Diversity

Polygenesis: poly = “many” genesis = “birth”

The Candelabra Hypothesis:The hypothesis of parallel evolution of

language in more than one place and by more than one group of Homo sapiens. Each of these languages would have diverged into many forms.

The major language groups of today would be descended from these separate mother tongues.

Page 26: Origins of language

Comparative and Anthropological Linguistics

Comparative linguists try to trace the original mother tongue (or tongues). Scholars compare modern languages and try to reconstruct ancient ones.

Anthropological linguists see language as a window into the past. Language changes much more slowly than the environment in which it is spoken, so you can learn a lot about the cultural history of the people who speak a language.

Page 27: Origins of language

Discussion Questions

What is the basic idea behind the bow-wow theory? Why are interjections like “ouch” considered to be

an unlikely source of language origin? Where is the pharynx and how did it become an

important part of human sound production? What happened at the Tower of Babel, and why is it

used in explaining language origins? What is the connection between the innateness

hypothesis and the idea of a Universal Grammar? Why do you think that young deaf children who

become fluent in sign language would be cited as a support of the innateness hypothesis?

Page 28: Origins of language

Discussion Questions

What is the connection between language, tool-using, and right-handedness?

Why is it difficult to believe Psammetichus that Phrygian must have been the first language?

What is monogenesis and how does it explain the development of languages?

What theory of language diversity would explain having different families of languages?

Page 29: Origins of language

Discussion Questions

Is there a connection between the Heimlich maneuver and the development of human speech?

What are the arguments for and against a teleological explanation of the origins of language?

Page 30: Origins of language

Homework

Read Chapter 2, Animals and Human Language, including study questions.

Page 31: Origins of language

References

Yule, George. 2010. The Study of Language. 4th Edition.

Vajda, Edward. Undated Manuscript. The Origin of Language.

Fromkin, et. al. 2009. An Introduction to Language.