Origin and Evolution of Languages
Serge Cleuziou, Jean-Paul Demoule, Pierre Encreve, Bernard Laks
Origin and Evolution of Languages has a strong interdisciplinary flavor designed to highlight the true complexity of the debates in the field. Many of the models and theories conjectured can only receive their validation from a convergence of arguments developed across disciplines. The book undersco... Read more
Published: 2008
Pages: 352
eBook: 9781845532048
Cover | Cover | ||
---|---|---|---|
Contents | v | ||
Chapter 1 | 1 | ||
1. Retrospectives and perspectives | 1 | ||
2. The fascination of origins: the great foundation stories | 3 | ||
3. Races and languages | 5 | ||
4. From diachrony to synchrony | 7 | ||
5. Prehistory and migrations | 9 | ||
6. Towards a new synthesis | 10 | ||
7. The new paradigms | 12 | ||
8. Origins and evolution of languages: retrospectives and perspectives | 15 | ||
Notes | 20 | ||
References | 23 | ||
Chapter 2 | 29 | ||
1. The expansion of modern humans and the standard model of human evolution | 29 | ||
2. The importance of language in promoting the expansion of modern humans | 31 | ||
3. The correlation of the tree of genes and that of languages | 32 | ||
4. Examples of language replacements | 34 | ||
5. Agricultural expansions and the spread of language families in the last 10,000 years | 35 | ||
6. Independent evolutionary histories confirming the standard model | 38 | ||
References | 38 | ||
Chapter 3 | 40 | ||
1. Introduction | 40 | ||
2. Languages of the Caucasus, with special reference to Azerbaijani | 46 | ||
3. The Indo‑Europeanization of Europe | 49 | ||
4. The anglicization of England | 55 | ||
5. Conclusions | 60 | ||
Acknowledgment | 61 | ||
References | 61 | ||
Chapter 4 | 63 | ||
1. Organisms as documents | 63 | ||
2. A poor design feature: tolerance of allomorphy | 66 | ||
3. A poor design feature: grammatical functions | 69 | ||
4. A poor design feature: the distinction between sentences and nominal expressions | 71 | ||
5. Conclusion | 75 | ||
Acknowledgment | 76 | ||
References | 77 | ||
Chapter 5 | 79 | ||
1. Introduction | 79 | ||
2. Methodological issues | 79 | ||
3. Some things that are not reliable evidence | 87 | ||
4. The futility of modern lexical comparisons as evidence of Proto-World | 90 | ||
5. Structural speculations | 96 | ||
6. Society and language complexity | 99 | ||
7. What of the structure of the earliest human language(s)? | 101 | ||
8. Conclusion | 104 | ||
Notes | 105 | ||
References | 107 | ||
Chapter 6 | 112 | ||
1. The evolutionary grounding of grammar in conceptual structure | 112 | ||
2. The role of communication in language origins | 114 | ||
3. The rejection of the classical position on the origins of grammar | 116 | ||
4. Language users represent full grammatical structure, however pared down their actual utterances are | 119 | ||
5. A three-stage model for the evolution of grammar | 122 | ||
6. Grammatical change is syntagmatic, not paradigmatic | 123 | ||
7. Grammars do not necessarily do what is useful for the language user | 125 | ||
8. Departures from strict conceptual structure – grammatical structure match ups | 127 | ||
9. Conclusion | 128 | ||
Notes | 129 | ||
References | 129 | ||
Chapter 7 | 133 | ||
1. Central discoveries of CIT | 134 | ||
2. The mystery of language | 136 | ||
3. Existing theories | 136 | ||
4. A range of arresting human singularities | 139 | ||
5. What should a proper theory of language look like? | 140 | ||
6. The central problem of language | 142 | ||
7. Gradients of conceptual integration and the emergence of language | 144 | ||
8. The origin of cognitively modern humans | 148 | ||
Acknowledgement | 153 | ||
Notes | 153 | ||
References | 155 | ||
Chapter 8 | 157 | ||
1. The genealogical model | 157 | ||
2. Classical comparativism and its critics | 159 | ||
3. Genealogical comparativism: the comeback | 169 | ||
4. Opening | 175 | ||
Notes | 176 | ||
References | 188 | ||
Chapter 9 | 192 | ||
1. Simulations as theories | 192 | ||
2. The expansion of the Assyrian empire | 193 | ||
3. The expansion of farming in Europe | 196 | ||
4. Origins and differentiation of European languages | 203 | ||
5. Demic or cultural? | 208 | ||
6. Further developments of the model | 209 | ||
7. Conclusion | 212 | ||
References | 213 | ||
Chapter 10 | 215 | ||
1. The linguistic situation | 217 | ||
2. Linguistic relationships | 225 | ||
3. The non-Indo-European languages of ancient Europe | 228 | ||
4. Linguistic palaeontology and comparative mythology | 230 | ||
5. In conclusion | 232 | ||
Notes | 234 | ||
References | 236 | ||
Chapter 11 | 241 | ||
1. Eurasiatic | 244 | ||
2. Language in the Americas | 248 | ||
3. Global etymologies | 249 | ||
4. Human origins | 253 | ||
References | 256 | ||
Chapter 12 | 257 | ||
1. Principles | 257 | ||
2. Application of principles in detail | 258 | ||
3. The cycle of language replication and its consequences | 259 | ||
4. Complications | 261 | ||
5. Nontrivial contact phenomena | 263 | ||
6. Future research | 269 | ||
Notes | 270 | ||
References | 270 | ||
Chapter 13 | 272 | ||
1.Introduction | 272 | ||
2. Why creoles have not developed from pidgins | 273 | ||
3. Why creoles were not made by children | 277 | ||
4. Do creoles tell us something about the evolution of language in mankind? | 282 | ||
5. What creoles tell us about the evolution of language | 286 | ||
Acknowledgments | 290 | ||
Notes | 290 | ||
References | 294 | ||
Chapter 14 | 298 | ||
1. Sumerians in the Garden of Eden: newcomers or earlier inhabitants? | 299 | ||
2. Some methodological aspects | 305 | ||
3. The early roots of Sumerian’s archaeology | 309 | ||
4. Mesopotamia and the east: Elam and beyond | 313 | ||
5. From colonies to Urukian wars and people from the north | 316 | ||
6. Concluding remarks | 321 | ||
Notes | 323 | ||
References | 326 | ||
Index of authors | 331 | ||
Index of languages | 338 | ||
Index of subjects | 341 |