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Linguistics is the scientific study of language, its evolution, structure, and usage. Linguistics demonstrates that languages are complex interactive systems. Languages evolve over time, they mutate, change, and develop to meet new situations. Factors such as geographical location, cross-cultural contact, and time all contribute to this. The rate of change is faster when the people speaking the language experience social change. Two examples are the way new words entered the English language from others during the age of imperialism, and the way new coinages enter common parlance to deal with modern information technologies.
Noam Chomsky (1928- ) has famously suggested that the basic structure of language is hard-wired in human beings. He argued that there is a specific organ for language processing and that humans are born with Universal Grammar,[1] an innate ability to understand basic grammatical principles. This view, originally known as Nativism, has evolved into Generative linguistics.[2] The validity of Universal Grammar remains a subject of heated (and rather nasty) debate within the linguistics community. On the other side of the debate is the Behaviorist view: that children are born as "blank slates" without Universal Grammar and gather all linguistic information from their environment. One piece of evidence for Chomsky's theory is that children of parents who speak a pidgin[3] will speak the language with a more sophisticated and consistent syntactic system than their parents, turning the pidgin into a full-fledged creole[4] language.[5][6] Something similar has been observed in the children of deaf people in communities where there was no known sign language, and their parents had to invent their own simple version. There is, furthermore, evidence of a community of deaf children in Nicaragua developing a sign language from scratch of their own accord.[7][8] It must be added, however, that the deaf children in Nicaragua did not grow up in a speechless community. They knew about language. This is therefore not quite the evolutionary jump that it is made out to be.
The evolution of language in many ways parallels that of the evolution of biological species. For example, geographic isolation results in changes over time that can lead to two quite different languages from what started as a common language. The Romance languages provide a great example of this. French, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, and Romanian all originated from Latin, but over time the various dialects of Latin became distinct languages. One has only to contemplate the differences between British English and American English to see how quickly geographic separation can lead to the evolution of two dialects from what was once the same language (Early Modern English).
Studies of language on islands in the Pacific Ocean have clearly demonstrated how languages can change over time in geographic isolation. A group speaking the same language (hypothesized to be representatives of the Hemudu culture) travelled from mainland Asia and settled the first island they came to (Taiwan). Years later, as population pressure increased, a group set off from that island to a farther one. This sequence of events, repeated over time, resulted in the formation of the Austronesian language family. Studies show that the language of those who settled the first island bears the greatest resemblance to that spoken by the original migrants from the mainland. The farther an island is from the mainland, the greater the difference in the language that is spoken there. Small changes in language that occurred on the first island were carried to the second, where further additional changes developed over time and were carried to the second island, and so on. At some point, after the passage of time and distance, the populations living farthest apart no longer understand each other. This is remarkably similar to the process of biological evolution that can occur with species migrating from island to island, adapting to new environments, and eventually becoming incapable of interbreeding.
The story of the construction of the Tower of Babel and God's breaking of the builders' common language into many languages as a punishment was a primitive attempt to explain why there were so many languages on the Earth at the time (as there are still now).
Linguistics is a diverse subject that has several subfields, including:
Other topics include:
Categories: [Science] [Social science]