Comments on David McNeill's Book (2012) How Language Began Comments on David McNeill's Book (2012) How Language Began
Buttressing the Human Niche

Comments on David McNeill's Book (2012) How Language Began

    • CHF 3.00
    • CHF 3.00

Beschreibung des Verlags

David McNeill spent years in the Departments of Psychology and Linguistics, exploring the nature of human speech and gesture. Gesture coincides with speech. The gestures are holistic and imagistic. Speech is detailed and propositional. Clearly, these two real elements are contiguous in contemporary talk.
The question is why?
If this behavior expresses evolved traits, then how did talk evolve?
This is one of the topics addressed in the masterwork, The Human Niche. What explains the evolution of talk? The answer? Talk is an adaptation exploiting the niche of triadic relations.
This hypothesis stands on close reading of four works on human evolution, two from the anthropological and two from the linguistic points of view.
McNeill's work lies outside this base, since it directly addresses the evolution of talk, rather than language, as defined by Saussure.
For many years, the linguistics lab at the University of Chicago has documented the coincidence of gesture and speech, within the milieu of speech-alone talk. The gestures are engaging. The speech is descriptive. Curiously, the hands convey aspects of the story that speech strains to provide. Stories? Yes, volunteers are filmed as they tell the story of an animated cartoon, featuring Sylvester, the cat, Tweety, the bird, and the old lady who owns the bird. The cartoons are hilarious.
So, McNeill has a distinct point of view when he formulates how talk evolved. Yet, he does not have the simple tool of the category-based nested form. McNeill proposes a hypothesis and strives to establish it. In these comments, McNeill's hypothesis is re-articulated in the relational structure of the category-based nested form, resulting in a picture of human evolution that complements the hypothesis presented in The Human Niche.
Humans evolved to exploit the realness of triadic relations.

GENRE
Wissenschaft und Natur
ERSCHIENEN
2018
8. Juli
SPRACHE
EN
Englisch
UMFANG
38
Seiten
VERLAG
Razie Mah
GRÖSSE
821.8
 kB

Mehr Bücher von Razie Mah

Comments on Alexander Dugin’s Book (2012) The Fourth Political Theory Comments on Alexander Dugin’s Book (2012) The Fourth Political Theory
2015
Comments on Mariusz Tabaczek's Arc of Inquiry (2019-2024) Part 2 Comments on Mariusz Tabaczek's Arc of Inquiry (2019-2024) Part 2
2024
Comments on Mariusz Tabaczek's Arc of Inquiry (2019-2024) Part 1 Comments on Mariusz Tabaczek's Arc of Inquiry (2019-2024) Part 1
2024
Comments on Michael Tomasello's Arc of Inquiry (1999-2019) Part 1 Comments on Michael Tomasello's Arc of Inquiry (1999-2019) Part 1
2024
Comments on Michael Tomasello's Arc of Inquiry (1999-2019) Part 2 Comments on Michael Tomasello's Arc of Inquiry (1999-2019) Part 2
2024
Comments on David Graeber and David Wengrow's Book (2021) "The Dawn of Everything" Comments on David Graeber and David Wengrow's Book (2021) "The Dawn of Everything"
2023

Andere Bücher in dieser Reihe

Comments on Michael Tomasello's Arc of Inquiry (1999-2019) Part 1 Comments on Michael Tomasello's Arc of Inquiry (1999-2019) Part 1
2024
Comments on Michael Tomasello's Arc of Inquiry (1999-2019) Part 2 Comments on Michael Tomasello's Arc of Inquiry (1999-2019) Part 2
2024
Comments on Chris Sinha’s Essay (2018) "Praxis, Symbol and Language" Comments on Chris Sinha’s Essay (2018) "Praxis, Symbol and Language"
2021
Comments on Christy Hemphill’s Essay (2019) "All in a Week’s Work" Comments on Christy Hemphill’s Essay (2019) "All in a Week’s Work"
2020
Comments on John Barrett and Krystalli Damilati’s Essay (2004) "Some Light on the Early Origins of Them All" Comments on John Barrett and Krystalli Damilati’s Essay (2004) "Some Light on the Early Origins of Them All"
2019
Comments on Stella Souvatzi, Adnan Baysal and Emma Baysal’s Essay (2019) "Is there Pre-history" Comments on Stella Souvatzi, Adnan Baysal and Emma Baysal’s Essay (2019) "Is there Pre-history"
2019