Leave @threebikesmcginty out of this.That is going to make it very hard for any animal that lacks the physical ability to make the same noises as us.
Leave @threebikesmcginty out of this.That is going to make it very hard for any animal that lacks the physical ability to make the same noises as us.
Dogs know things. We know that we know things. There lies the difference.
I can't lick my b0ll0cks either*, but most male dogs can**.
*I've tried
**their own, not mine.
BSLCan you expand on that? I can't imagine one without them.
^^^^ I learned to speak Spanish from someone who couldn't speak English so my second language evolved mainly in the language itself without referencing back to my first language (a bit like a child's first language evolves). In the early days there were times when I wanted to express a concept but didn't have the vocabulary and the strange thing was that sometimes when I thought back to my first language the words didn't immediately come to mind either. So I must have thought the "concept" first then applied the language afterwards.I am not convinced that we really think our thoughts in words. Certainly not exclusively and maybe not at all. I reckon we add the words at a higher level on some of our thoughts but for a lot of stuff there isn't time.
Sign languages such as BSL can encode everything that spoken language can, it is only the nature of the symbols that changes. Sign users manage to ask, apologise, express emotions etc just as fluently as users of spoken languages.
See my reply about BSL. I think the nature of the symbols is of relatively low importance, but the communicative use of them and the way they can be recombined to transmit meaning, of all kinds, are more significant.That is going to make it very hard for any animal that lacks the physical ability to make the same noises as us.
I didn't say it encodes spoken language, I said they are both capable of encoding exactly the same range of meanings which of course includes speech acts.Sorry Rob, I don't think you really understand what BSL is. It does not encode spoken language, it is a language in its own right, with all the attributes of a spoken language plus aspects of space and time that spoken language is less efficient at making use of. Speech is a form of language, not a definition of it.
Leave @threebikesmcginty out of this.
OK, I was struggling to find the best terminology there, but bear with the term 'archetype' for the moment.OK, I misunderstood you. But the 'archetype' myth is wrong and problematic.
11001111000001111FWIW I don't believe that computer languages are languages in any general meaning of the term.
What is your definition of 'language' then, as opposed to simply 'communication'? Compared to mine, you seem to include a range of communications that I would class as non-linguistic, eg. body language.Well, I don't at all agree that "spoken languages are the primary form of language" is a base definition. It's very likely that humans communicated fluently and effectively with gesture and body language long before speech began to evolve. And animals also use the language of their bodies to communicate with each other incredibly effectively, which brings us neatly back to Accy's original question about how thought could exist without words.
Profoundly deaf children don't have empty brains just because they can't hear speech. Deaf people dream in sign, and Oliver Sacks records seeing an elderly profoundly deaf woman signing in her sleep. These aren't offshoots of spoken language, it's the other way around. Speech is a relative newcomer in the language stakes.
Fair enough. I think we're coming at the question from different disciplines, I'm approaching it from that of linguistics, where the object of study is clearly what are conventionally called 'languages'. The role of other types of communication is acknowledged, indeed it can't be otherwise as once you start looking at socio- or psychological aspects of language the boundaries become quite blurred, but the stuff with the semantics, phonetics*, words(another matter of debate!) and syntax still forms the core.A language is the method by which communication takes place. Speech is one form. Gesture is another. Runes are a language. The people who try to fix faulty communication in humans are called "Speech AND language therapists" for the good reason that communication consists in far more than just speech. The trouble is that the world is dominated by speech, to the point that anyone who doesn't speak for whatever reason is thought of as disabled (or sometimes in the case of Deaf people who do not have speech, I'm sorry to say, "dumb").
Right now. Everything. Mainly, should i let Mrs Accy lock our dog up tomorrow for 10 hours. Or should i go and rescue him and risk me getting a warning for having a pet in this place.What's on your mind Accy?