aggle-rithm
Ardent Formulist
I am writing a blog entry that has something to do with linguistics, and would like a reality check from anyone who knows more about the subject than I do.
It seems logical that there should exist languages associated with primitive cultures that have no means of expressing lofty ideas such as self-determination, or meta-cognition, or any number of other notions that require a great deal of self-reflection. I would imagine that cultures that are concerned mainly with the nuts and bolts of survival will find no need to develop vocabulary and/or idioms to express complex philisophical ideas.
The closest parallel that I know of is the Cherokee language used by the code talkers in WWII. Although I know of no philisophical restrictions in the language, there was a problem with communicating ideas having to do with recent technological advances...the language had no words for "airplane" or "tank", for instance, so existing words had to be co-opted to refer to these things. It seems reasonable to assume that there might be other languages that would have difficulty with communicating other advanced concepts, particularly those having to do with intense self-reflection.
Am I correct in this assumption, or are the semantics of these philisophical concepts universal?
(PS -- I'm sure that any language in the world is CAPABLE of expressing these ideas, the question is, DO they?)
It seems logical that there should exist languages associated with primitive cultures that have no means of expressing lofty ideas such as self-determination, or meta-cognition, or any number of other notions that require a great deal of self-reflection. I would imagine that cultures that are concerned mainly with the nuts and bolts of survival will find no need to develop vocabulary and/or idioms to express complex philisophical ideas.
The closest parallel that I know of is the Cherokee language used by the code talkers in WWII. Although I know of no philisophical restrictions in the language, there was a problem with communicating ideas having to do with recent technological advances...the language had no words for "airplane" or "tank", for instance, so existing words had to be co-opted to refer to these things. It seems reasonable to assume that there might be other languages that would have difficulty with communicating other advanced concepts, particularly those having to do with intense self-reflection.
Am I correct in this assumption, or are the semantics of these philisophical concepts universal?
(PS -- I'm sure that any language in the world is CAPABLE of expressing these ideas, the question is, DO they?)