1 / 17

The Origins of Language Jordan Zlatev

Lecture 10 Why language evolved?. The Origins of Language Jordan Zlatev. Constraints on explanations. No “future utility” – evolution does not plan ahead! Should benefit the individual (also), not just the group Match timeframe and environment: hunter-gatherers, (mostly) on the savannah

marlow
Download Presentation

The Origins of Language Jordan Zlatev

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lecture 10 Why language evolved? The Origins of LanguageJordan Zlatev

  2. Constraints on explanations • No “future utility” – evolution does not plan ahead! • Should benefit the individual (also), not just the group • Match timeframe and environment: hunter-gatherers, (mostly) on the savannah • Why not in other species? (The “why don’t chimps talk?” test…)

  3. Factors as “the main selective pressure” for language • Change in diet: Hunting and provisioning • Change in technology: complex tool-making • Change in sexual system • Change in child care (and growth pattern) • Change in group size • Change in social relations • Machiavellian intelligence (competition) • “Christian” intelligence (co-operation, empathy)

  4. Relevant traits: apart from language • Efficient bipedalism, allowing (long distance) running • Brain: three times larger, and at least in part, re-organized (rapid increase with H. erectus) • Larger groups, but still relatively “peaceful” • (Partially) monogamous • Neotony and unusually long childhood, then sudden puberty (with Neanderthals) • “Natural pedagogy” • Technology – complex stone tools (with H. erectus) • Mimesis (imitation and pantomine/gesture)

  5. Finally… • There may be other adaptations, less directly related to language, but preparing the (long) road towards it…

  6. Hunting (and gathering) • Pro - Important both for hominines and for present hunter gatherers (Kaplan et al 2000) - Increased levels with life in open habitats (also in chimpanzees, baboons) - Requires “quality education” (Roebroeks 2001) - Increased levels of co-operation and possibly division of labor (male/female) - Meat diet matches timeframe for brain growth and stone tools • Con - To a large extent present in chimpanzees (males), possibly for “bonding” - A largely “silent activity” (Dunbar 2003)

  7. (Active) scavanging • Pro - Chimpanzees don’t scavange (Plummer & Stanford 2000) - Large carcasses on the savannah – require large groups, scouts, recruitment, displaced communication (Bickerton 2009) - Not a “silent activity” - Meat diet matches timeframe for brain growth and stone tools • Con - Chimpanzees scavange (O’Connell et al. 2002 etc)

  8. Tool-making • Con - Chimps and other animals use (and even manufacture) tools too - A “solitary activity” in which language plays little role - Slow rate of change - No clear match between stone industries and species (Davidson 2003) • Pro - Acheuliantools mark a transition in complexity; withH. sapiensa “clear acceleration of the pace of technological and cultural innovation” (:201) - Even if not a direct factor for the evolution of language, a factor for mimesis (Donald 1991) - “Sequential and combinatorial activity” (: 202): an exaptation for communication

  9. Sex • Pro - Clearly relevant: “if you don’t reproduce, you are an evolutionary failure” (: 202) - Human reproductive systems are unique for mammals: (partially, serially) monogamous, while maintaining life in (large) groups + paternal provisioning and collaborative hunting => symbolic communication (Deacon 1997) • Con - Communication/language not a matter of sexual selection: clearly functional - Humans and chimps have similar levels of sexual dimorphism - Not obvious that human sexual system is more complex than that of chimps, and could even have been “mainly polygynous in the very recent past” (: 204) – Dupanloup et al. (2003)

  10. Child care and teaching • Pro - Unusual growth pattern: neotony, childhood, sudden transition (Bogin 1999) - Parental – and group child care: less (sexual) competition, more social learning - Active teaching: (near) universal, and unique for our species • Con - Cultures reported “without pedagogy” - Why adaptive for language, and not in other species?

  11. Social relations • Pro - Large groups: ecologically “good”, but require management of intra-group competition for food and mates - “Solution to the dilemma lies in the evolution of social intelligence” (: 210) > brain growth - Communication required to reduce the “cognitive arms race”, “vocal grooming” (Dunbar 1996) - Motivation to provide information :“reputation” and social status are important for individual fitness (Dessalles 2004) • Con - Vocal grooming: “pleasant but meaningless noices” (Bickerton 2002) - More emphasis on “politics” – competition and “reciprocal altruism” rather than (true) empathy

  12. Other (non “crackpot”) factors • Childhood play: animals play, but not “symbolically” • Singing: a factor in the transition from mimesis/gesture to speech (Burling 2005) • Narratives: all cultures have stories and most “myths”, and these require an elaborate, sequential, semiotic system (Donald 1991) • Visual art: not a cause, but not an obvious consequence of language either – still, an index of cultural (and cognitive) complexity

  13. Conclusion: no single cause, and hence explanation • A combination of factors (and theories) is necessary in order to explain the multiple ape-human differences, and their interrelation, such as a “scenario” relating: • Bipedalism • Complex social life • Intersubjectivity (empathy, normativity) • Mimesis (in skill and communication) • Speech and narratives

  14. Bipedalism • Often explained as an adaptation to ecological changes: drier climate, life on the savannah, energy economy… • But the transition to bipedalism occurred earlier than the drying up of Africa around 3.5 million years ago • A possible explanation: apes stand on two legs when they need to “display” > in hominines: also for displaying… sexual parts (clear evidence for sexual selection)

  15. Bipedalism and intersubjectivity • Freeing of the hands for other tasks (carrying, tool making, gesturing) • Changes in the birth canal: immature infants, need for longer parental care • Exaptation: more social learning (and play) for children • Adaptation: longer childhood, teaching • Selection for good “mothers and others” (Hrdy 2009): empathy and intersubjectivity • Selection for …“love” (Fisher, Maturana)

  16. Complex social life and mimesis • Living in larger groups: negative “side effects”: intra-group competition • Vocal grooming, “song”: affiliation (Dunbar) • Male hunting and provisioning, and food distribution => origin of “marriage”, a binding social contract (Deacon) • Selection pressures for mimetic skills: tool-use, and social learning • Exaptation for communication: representational gestures • Recruitment using displaced communication (Bickerton)

  17. Speech and narrative • Vocal communication • More efficient than whole-body • Vocal control trained independently by song? • Narratives • A “selective pressure” for the cultural evolution of languages – the complexities of grammar are most functional for relating multiple propositions and discourse referents

More Related