Exploring the history and complexity of language, from the infinite potential of word combinations to the role of the unconscious in cognitive functions. Delving into the innate nature of language acquisition in children and the importance of preserving linguistic diversity.
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insights INSIGHT
Innate Language Ability
Language acquisition involves analyzing and recombining units of meaning.
Children naturally look for patterns like nouns, verbs, and subjects to understand language.
insights INSIGHT
Universal Language Design
All languages share a common design structure, suggesting an innate basis.
This includes arbitrary sound-meaning pairings, grammatical categories, and inflection rules.
insights INSIGHT
Worldview and Language
Languages share common structures due to inherent assumptions about the world.
We assume things act and are acted upon, shaping language structure.
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Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the history of our ideas about the formation of language. The psychologist George Miller worked out that in English there are potentially a hundred million trillion sentences of twenty words in length - that’s a hundred times the number of seconds since the birth of the universe. “Language”, as Chomsky put it, “makes infinite use of finite media”. “Language”, as Steven Pinker puts it, “comes so naturally to us that it’s easy to forget what a strange and miraculous gift it is”. “All over the world”, he writes, “members of our species spend a good part of their lives fashioning their breath into hisses and hums and squeaks and pops and are listening to others do the same”. Jean Jacques Rousseau once said that we differ from the animal kingdom in two main ways - the use of language and the prohibition of incest. Language and our ability to learn it has been held up traditionally as our species’ most remarkable achievement, marking us apart from the animals. But in the 20th century, our ideas about how language is formed are being radically challenged and altered. With Dr Jonathan Miller, medical doctor, performer, broadcaster, author and film and opera director; Steven Pinker, cognitive scientist, Professor of Psychology and Director of the Centre for Neuroscience, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, California.