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Preserving Language Diversity: Lessons from Amazonia

Preserving Language Diversity: Lessons from Amazonia. Simon D. Levy Computer Science Department Washington & Lee University Lexington, VA 24450 http://www.cs.wlu.edu/~levy. First W&L/Petrobras Conference on the Environment, Economy, and Sustainable Development 22 June 2007. Outline.

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Preserving Language Diversity: Lessons from Amazonia

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  1. Preserving Language Diversity: Lessons from Amazonia Simon D. Levy Computer Science Department Washington & Lee University Lexington, VA 24450 http://www.cs.wlu.edu/~levy First W&L/Petrobras Conference on the Environment, Economy, and Sustainable Development 22 June 2007

  2. Outline • Biodiversity • Language Diversity • The case of Pirahã • Conclusions

  3. I. Biodiversity

  4. Rainforest Biodiversity • Greatest plant biodiversity is in rainforests: 170,000 of the world's 250,000 known plant species. • “We are trying to do biology knowing perhaps only a tenth, or one hundredth, of our species” – Terry Gosliner, National Geographic

  5. Biodiversity and Pharmacology

  6. II. Language Diversity: Sound and Sense

  7. Language: A Window on the Mind • Reflects / affects how we think about the world • Amazing variety of ways of saying the “same thing” • Counter-intuitive constraints not derivable (?) from more general principles

  8. Fallacies & Pitfalls • “Eskimo has over 100 words for snow.” • “Primitive” languages

  9. Sound

  10. Sound

  11. Sound

  12. Sound

  13. Sound

  14. Sense: Gender • English: (1) Masculine (2) Feminine • Dyirbal (Dixon 1979): (1) Animate objects, men (2) Women, water, fire, violence (3) Edible fruit and vegetables (4) Miscellaneous

  15. Sense: Counting

  16. Counting

  17. Sense: Activity (Fillmore 1968) He ran away. Agent Agent Object She hit him. He felt sick. Object

  18. O Activity A A he him O English

  19. Activity A A O O Chinook

  20. Activity A O A O Dakota (c.f. Spanish Me gusta, English Methinks)

  21. Activity A A O O Takelma

  22. So What Is Universal?(Human vs. Animal Language) • Hauser, Chomsky, and Fitch, (2002): Recursion- the ability to combine words without limit: I enjoyed the Piatam conference. I told Jim that I enjoyed the Piatam conference. Laurence knew that I told Jim that I enjoyed the Piatam conference. etc. • I.e., every human language is infinite.

  23. III. The Case of Pirahã

  24. South American Languages

  25. South American Languages

  26. 300 languages: 20 families, 12 isolates

  27. Pirahã

  28. The Pirahã People • Remnant of Mura tribe (late 1700’s) • 150-200 hunter-gatherers living along the Maici River • Trade and reproduce • w/outsiders, but no interest in outsider language or culture

  29. Pirahã Language & Culture (Everett 1979 … 2005)

  30. Sound System But rich “suprasegmental” inventory (sung speech: )

  31. Lexicon & Grammar • No color terms • No counting words • No recursion: I enjoyed the Piatam conference. I told Jim. Laurence knew it. • Huge controversy • A finite human language? • Culture influencing (determining?) language: “Immediacy of Experience Principle”

  32. IV. Conclusions

  33. Threats to Glossodiversity • “Of the more than 6,000 languages currently being spoken, fewer than half are likely to survive the [21st] century” – Douglas Whalen, Endangered Language Fund • Appears to correlate with biodiversity (Manne 2003) • The languages most likely to give us new insights are the ones that are most endangered.

  34. Each language in this sense, while sharing cognitive and communicative principles in common with all other languages spoken by Homo sapiens, is unique. This is why it is such a tragedy when a language dies — we don't just lose a grammar. We lose an entire way of thinking and talking about the world; we lose a set of solutions to the problems that beset us all as humans. - D. L. Everett

  35. Links • RECURSION AND HUMAN THOUGHT: WHY THE PIRAHÃ DON'T HAVE NUMBERS: A Talk With Daniel L. Everett http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge213.html#everett • Endangered Language Fund: http://www.endangeredlanguagefund.org

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