The origin of language and consciousness : how social orders and communicative concerns gave rise to speech and cognitive abilities
著者
書誌事項
The origin of language and consciousness : how social orders and communicative concerns gave rise to speech and cognitive abilities
(World-systems evolution and global futures / series editors, Christopher Chase-Dunn ... [et al.])
Springer, c2023
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and indexes
内容説明・目次
内容説明
This book presents an evolutionary theory of the origin and step-by-step development of linguistic structures and cognitive abilities from the early stages of anthropogenesis to the Upper Paleolithic. Emphasizing the social nature of the human mind and using an extended version of C.Hempel's explanatory logic, the author proves that language and consciousness emerged and evolved through the daily efforts of our ancestors to overcome mutual misunderstandings in increasingly complex social orders with increasing tasks on memory, thinking, and normative regulation of behavior, with the addition of new and new communicative concerns.
The book addresses questions such as the following:
What unique social conditions led to the emergence of the first protosyllables and protowords?
What steps enabled the crossing of the "linguistic Rubicon" (between animal communication and human speech)?
Why were syllables and phonemes needed?
How did our ancestors overcome the difficulties of misunderstanding?
How, when, and why did ancient people learn to speak in turns? Why did they begin to talk about past and distant events?
What is consciousness and how did it evolve along with language?
How many original languages were there and why are there roughly 200 philas (language macrofamilies)?
How and why did the number of languages and the degree of their complexity change in pre-written history?
Did the Romance languages really evolve from Latin?
Accordingly, the book will appeal to scholars in various disciplines who are interested in a better understanding of the cognitive aspects of anthropogenesis and the ancient origins of language and consciousness.
目次
Chapter 1. Structuring the conceptual field: Typologies, paradigms, and results.- Chapter 2. Basic concepts and principles of cognitive evolution.- Chapter 3. Explanatory fundamentals: From niches to interactive rituals.- Chapter 4. Self-domestication and normativity: Conditions for the breakthrough to speech.- Chapter 5. Crossing the "language Rubicon": From signal multiplication to distinguishing protowords.- Chapter 6. The childhood of language: Rephrasing rituals and reactive protophrases.- Chapter 7. "Managing imagination" of interlocutors and the phases of protolanguage development.- Chapter 8. The need for syntax and illusion of the consciousness totality.- Chapter 9. Bridging the Pre-language gap.- Chapter 10. Linguistic complexity and simplicity: The socioevolutionary roots.- Chapter 11. The nature of the affinity of modern languages.- Chapter 12. Conclusion.
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