170 likes | 347 Vues
WHAT IS LANGUAGE?. DEFINITIONS HUMAN AND ANIMAL LANGUAGES. Different definitions for different purposes. Language as a system as a universal human capacity as a means of communication as a social phenomenon. HUMAN AND ANIMAL LANGUAGES The issue of continuity.
E N D
WHAT IS LANGUAGE? DEFINITIONS HUMAN AND ANIMAL LANGUAGES
Different definitions for different purposes Language • as a system • as a universal human capacity • as a means of communication • as a social phenomenon
HUMAN AND ANIMAL LANGUAGES The issue of continuity • Are humans just a step further in practising an adapted behaviour? • What are the similarities and differences in human and animal communication? • Are they qualitative or quantitave? - measurable? - origin?
Animal communication • Through sounds, smells, visual signals and touching: - of birds, bees, ants, bears and dogs
Mixed signals • Species-specific (cats and dogs)
Why are vocal signals easier to use? • Work from a distance: sender and receiver do not have to be close • Work in the dark • Receiver does not have to turn toward sender • Can be used simultaneously with other activities
What determines the nature of signals? • Higher position on the evolutionary scale? - Of birds and chimpanzees • Social activity? - Of cuckoos, bees and ancient hunters
Differences (Hocket) • Use of sound signals - vocal auditory channel • Rapidly fading signal - special types of memory
Total feedback - hearing our voice - talking to ourselves - difficult for the deaf • Interchangeabilty - male crickets chirp - working bees dance - male pheasants’ mating dance • Specialisation - only for communication
Openness, creativity - animal communication:limited set of signs, triggered by a stimulus - human language constantly changes, new items are added, is freely applied
Arbitrariness -animals: often connection between signal and meaning - humans: no connection, interpretation is based on consensus “When I use a word,” Humpty Dumpty saidin a rather scornful tone, “it means just whatI choose it to mean – neither more notless.” (Lewis Carroll: Alice in Wonderland)
Discreteness • Duality • Patterning - bats, stabs but NOT sbat - boathouse vs. Houseboat - Jack kissed Mary. Vs. Mary kissed Jack but NOT Kissed Jack Mary “But I’m not so think as you drunk I am.” (Sir J.C. Squire, writer)
Functionality, intention - cause, purpose consideration - dolphins, Washoe and Sara
Displacement “Bees are not as busy as we think they are.They just can’t buzz any slower.” (F.M. Hubbard, American humorist) NO - past - future - questions • Prevarification - lies
Reflexiveness - talking about language • Traditional transmission - genetically imprinted behaviour vs. socioculturally transmitted
What is language? • Systematic and generative • A set of arbitrary symbols • Primarily verbal signals but also visual • Conventionalised meanings • Used for communication only • Operates in a speech community • Essentially human • Both language and language learning have universal features