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From: "Piorokrat" <piorokrat@autograf.pl>
Newsgroups: alt.fan.uncle-davey
Subject: Re: A short account of the possible history of human languages from Babel (was Re: Evolution - Blind Heart Surgery)
Date: Fri, 30 Jan 2004 07:27:54 +0000 (UTC)
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>
> On 26-Jan-2004, AC <mightymartianca@yahoo.ca> wrote:
>
> > Path:
> >
be1.columbus.rr.com!news-server.columbus.rr.com!cyclone.rdc-nyc.rr.com!news.
maxwell.syr.edu!newsfeed.stanford.edu!darwin.ediacara.org!there.is.no.cabal
> > From: AC <mightymartianca@yahoo.ca>
> > Newsgroups: talk.origins,alt.fan.uncle-davey,free.christians
> > Subject: Re: A short account of the possible history of human languages
> > from Babel (was Re: Evolution - Blind Heart Surgery)
> > Followup-To: talk.origins
> > Date: Mon, 26 Jan 2004 17:51:37 +0000 (UTC)
> > Organization: The Tao of Cow
> > Lines: 238
> > Sender: root@darwin.ediacara.org
> > Approved: robomod@ediacara.org
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> > References:
<laurieappieton-20040124035057.21792.00000635@mb-m06.aol.com>
> > <Xns947A5DCE18BC0ericvgillyahoocom@24.93.43.121>
> > <thm5105ind7aimbgpvso916tag2851i87h@4ax.com>
> > <Xns947A8AA8360C3ericvgillyahoocom@24.93.44.119>
> > <chq5109d7sb94c4vr308v0459u33utt8df@4ax.com>
> > <Xns947A9BD5F8270ericvgillyahoocom@24.93.43.119>
> > <buuvmq$cpc$0@pita.alt.net>
> > <Xns947AAACC86676ericvgillyahoocom@24.93.43.121>
> > <bv0jsq$6uk$2@news.onet.pl>
> > <Xns947B7CBC12A9Cericvgillyahoocom@24.93.44.119>
> > <bv13qe$7ej$1@news.onet.pl>
> > <47c45a21.0401252152.227d4c19@posting.google.com>
> > <bv3eev$7lr$1@atlantis.news.tpi.pl>
> > Reply-To: mightymartianca@yahoo.ca
> > NNTP-Posting-Host: darwin
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> > 17:51:38 GMT)
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> > User-Agent: slrn/0.9.8.0 (CYGWIN_NT-5.0)
> > Xref: news-server.columbus.rr.com talk.origins:1307524
> > alt.fan.uncle-davey:1496 free.christians:24870
> >
> > ["Followup-To:" header set to talk.origins.]
> > On Mon, 26 Jan 2004 16:16:19 +0000 (UTC),
> > Uncle Davey <noway@jose.com> wrote:
> > >
> > > news:47c45a21.0401252152.227d4c19@posting.google.com...
> > >> "Piorokrat" <piorokrat@autograf.pl> wrote in message
> > > news:<bv13qe$7ej$1@news.onet.pl>...
> > >> > news:Xns947B7CBC12A9Cericvgillyahoocom@24.93.44.119...
> > >> > > "Uncle Davey" <noway@jose.com> wrote in
> > >> > > news:bv0jsq$6uk$2@news.onet.pl:
> > >> > >
> > >> > > >
> > >> > > > news:Xns947AAACC86676ericvgillyahoocom@24.93.43.121...
> > >> > > >> "Uncle Davey" <noway@jose.com> wrote in
> > >> > > >> news:buuvmq$cpc$0@pita.alt.net:
> > >> >
> > >> > > >> > You're just trying to spin your way out, now.
> > >> > > >>
> > >> > > >> Hypocrite.
> > >> > > >>
> > >> > > >
> > >> > > > Not in the slightest,
> > >> > >
> > >> > > Wishful thinking won't help you, either. Developing a sudden
attack
> > >> > > of
> > >> > > honesty and straightfowardness is what you need.
> > >> > >
> > >> > > > I'm waiting for a god reason why they shouldn't
> > >> > > > be conflated.
> > >> > >
> > >> > > Of course, the way it works is YOU should you be showing why it
> > >> > > should
> > > be.
> > >> > >
> > >> > > > If the theory of evolution is true, it should cover language
too.
> > >> > >
> > >> > > That's *your* claim. We've been trying to get you to show why for
> > >> > > tens
> > > of
> > >> > > messages now, and here you are still stating it as a bald fact.
> > >> > >
> > >> >
> > >> > No no. The onus is on you to show why language should be an
> > >> > exception,
> > > and
> > >> > you are totally at a loss to do so.
> > >> >
> > >> > Uncle Davey
> > >>
> > >> Well, Uncle Davey, you've confused a lurker pretty well here. If you
> > >> would be so kind as to clarify:
> > >>
> > >> When you speak of linguistic evolution do you mean
> > >> 1) The evolution of the *capacity for language* in humans? Biological
> > >> evolution must indeed be able to explain this.
> > >> or
> > >> 2) What everyone else means, i.e. change in language, such as that
> > >> which produced French and Spanish from Latin? There is no reason why
a
> > >> theory which deals with genetic change should address a purely
> > >> cultural phenomenon, beyond explaining how it is biologically
possible
> > >> in the first place.
> > >> or even
> > >> 3) If one cannot trace linguistic evolution beyond the known
families,
> > >> (which probably arose at some time in the past that could very
loosely
> > >> fit the Babel account), then the Babel account is thereby not
> > >> contradicted?
> > >
> > > The way I see it is that everyone received their own language at
Babel.
> > > Even
> > > husbands and wives could not talk and little kids could not
communicate
> > > with
> > > their parents. This meant that in order to have an established family
> > > language, families needed to isolate themselves, and then they would
all
> > > learn the language of the mother of that family, as mothers are and
> > > always
> > > have been the main one to teach the little children language. The men
> > > therefore would also have needed to take their wive's grammar and
> > > syntax,
> > > but the wife would in return take a lot of the lexicon from her
husband,
> > > and
> > > in the process already the family language would become at once
> > > grammatically simpler but also lexically richer than the Babel exit
> > > languages each member spoke. We have the expression 'mother tongue' in
> > > almost every language but Welsh, which is like the exception that
proves
> > > the
> > > rule, exactly from this time, which was only one generation in the
> > > history
> > > of man.
> >
> > It's amazing what you can come up with when you don't give a damn about
> > evidence.
> >
> > >
> > > This was the mechanism that would have driven people out of Babel into
> > > their
> > > own place, so that they could quietly re-establish a common language
> > > with
> > > those who meant most to them, their family, without linguistic
> > > interference
> > > from all the others who would come babbling over the horizon,
preventing
> > > their children from achieving any linguistic competence.
> >
> > Except that by the time of the particular ziggurat in question was built
> > there were humans on every continent but Antarctica. I said this
before,
> > but you ignored it. Were American Indians, Chinese, Egyptians,
> > sub-Saharan
> > Africans and all the rest except for the folks in Mesopotomia mute?
>
> The stanard Creationist answer will be something like "those people
weren't
> there yet so...<fill in with pseudoarchaeo-drivel/goo>"
>
> I'm not going to put words in other poster's mouths, so I'm wondering what
> the response will be.
By definition they weren't there yet. I don't need no archaeology to help me
know that.
It's in Scripture.
>
>
> > >
> > > Within forty years, one language per family (already maybe one fifth
of
> > > the
> > > number actually made at Babel) was similar conflating and merging into
> > > tribal languages. The basic model would then be the family language of
> > > the
> > > most dominant family in the tribe. This process took longer than the
> > > family
> > > language process, as the new languages were being learned as foreign
> > > languages by all in the tribe but the dominant family. These dominant
> > > families are the ancestors of the aristocratic families that grew up
> > > later
> > > in almost every culture.
> >
> > Uh huh. Perhaps you can provide some evidence for this claim as well.
> >
> > >
> > > The tribal languages would have taken over from the family languages
so
> > > that
> > > about four hundred years after Babel the single family language was as
> > > redundant and extinct as the single person language had been forty
years
> > > after the Babel event.
> >
> > Four hundred years ain't a long time. 16th century English might have
> > some
> > odd words and usages, but by and by people have no problems
understanding
> > Shakespeare.
>
> In written form, it is easy. When done with period pronounciation, it
does
> sound alittle weird-but followable. Much earlier in time though, things
> start to sound *really* strange though.
You got, like, a time machine there, buddy?
With your unique knowledge of period pronunciations, perhaps you could help
me with a query. I have heard that theta was pronounced not as the 'th' of
things but as the 't-h' of 'met her' in the Greek of Sophocles and
Aeschylos. I thought that the shift to a true fricative came earlier. Can
you use your linguistic time machine to settle that one for me?
Or, what a typical evolutionist comment, mixing fantasy with fact! You don't
know what Shakespeare sounded like any more than you know what a
Brontosaurus looked like.
You can, at the most, have a theory about the Brontosaurus, ahem ahem, but
at this rate it'll be yours and nobody else's. <Cough! Cough! Cough!>
> It's worth noting that "tribe" is a unit of social-structural
> organization-not language. At least when the term is used by
anthro-types;
> historians use it in a different sense (which drives me crazy sometimes).
Tribe means a group of people unified by language, or other communality. You
can find references to more than one tribe in a language (then I call the
linguistic tribal level the supertribe, and supertribe is my coinage so
don't worry about the dictionary and then getting all offended that it's not
there, I'll save you the trip) you can find one language = one tribe, which
is pretty much the default setting and people continually try to get back to
that, (as in the case of Hebrew and Greek, which went supertribal and then
went back to being single tribe languages again, but are still supertribal
in another way, as they are learned by Biblical scholars all over the
world), and you only rarely get the converse, where a tribe is made up of a
bunch of languages. We can refer the Mongol horde, Attila's horde, and the
European Union.
In taxonomy the word 'tribe' has yet another meaning, but not relevant here.
> > > But each would have been a selection of grammars, phonologies and
> > > lexical
> > > materials that came out of the Babel event.
> > >
> > > Some of these tribal languages exist until today. Basque is a good
> > > example.
> >
> > Again, it is amazing what bafflegab you can come up with when you don't
> > need
> > to worry about evidence. Basque is an isolate from an earlier layer of
> > European colonization. The Basques were there when the Indo-Europeans
> > arrived.
>
> And given the tenacity of the Basques, I imagine that they will still be
> there when the current wave of Indo-Europeans are no more...
>
I doubt that. I given them thirty more years.
> > >
> > > Other tribes conflated again into the supertribe, and the supertribe
is
> > > where we find the original languages at the heads of the family trees
> > > that
> > > we can easily recognise. The Aryan supertribe spoke a language whose
> > > name we
> > > don't know, but call it Proto Indo European. They could have called it
> > > Yaspriyakis, or something like that, for all we know.
> >
> > Scientists don't make things up just because they don't know.
> >
> > >It was a supertribe,
> > > and as with all supertribes, it fell apart, with people who spoke it
> > > leaving
> > > and mingling with the languages of the substrate where they went,
which
> > > were
> > > generally tribal, not supertribal peoples, and could not compete with
> > > them.
> > > So we have a tendency for common grammatical elements to be seen, but
a
> > > lot
> > > of different lexical stock from the borrowings. Even the supertribe
> > > itself
> > > had not been stable long when the emigrations started; some thought
the
> > > word
> > > for 'a hundred' should be 'kentum' and others thought it should be
> > > 'sati'.
> > > About all they could really agree on was the words for beech trees,
> > > snow,
> > > and about twenty other matters.
> >
> > Are you saying that the breakup of PIE was a conscious effort?
> >
> > >
> > > So the supertribal language was the turning point. From Babel to the
> > > supertribal period, maybe a million languages got down to maybe thirty
> > > thousand. After that time the supertribal languages started to have
> > > multiple
> > > descendents, and even some descendents had multiple descendents
> > > themselves,
> > > so that they replaced the exit languages being spoken by peoples like
> > > the
> > > pre-Celtic cultures of Ireland, and then many of those languages, like
> > > Irish
> > > Celtic, themselves became forced into a minor role or often made
extinct
> > > altogether, like Cornish, by more vigorous languages of their distant
> > > cousins, such as English.
> > >
> > >> Incidently, even broader groups than Nostratic have been proposed,
> > >> including attempts to reconstruct words of Proto-World. Unfortunately
> > >> the only one I recall at the moment is rather indelicate.
> > >
> > > There's every chance that we can guess at a word that was in the
> > > vocabulary
> > > of somebody who walked out of Babel, maybe in a sound-shifted or
> > > abbreviated
> > > form. After all, all the material in every tribal or supertribal
> > > language
> > > came from someone or other's Babel exit language. It's not common for
> > > languages to invent words, so even 'shit' has good cognates in Greek.
If
> > > we
> > > say that 'skata' is closer, because we can tell it didn't go through
the
> > > Germanic sound shifts which we know all about thanks to Grimm, then we
> > > can
> > > ascert with a good probability of truth that some rather powerful man
or
> > > his
> > > wife, with a penchant for talking about his or her bodily functions,
> > > received the ancestor word for 'skata/shit' in his or her personal
> > > language
> > > at Babel.
> >
> > I'm loving this. A little bit of knowledge can indeed be dangerous.
You
> > so
> > seamlessly mix fact and fiction that I'm sure there are people
> > sufficiently
> > unversed in linguistics that they actually buy it.
>
> I like the way you put that. Having taken a year of lingusitics, it was
an
> odd thing to read the original post: terms and conventions I
understood-but
> used so...differently. After reading it the first thing I thought was
"this
> needs to be responded to-but where to start..."
>
> I'm glad someone else made a good start. Thanks for that.
>
You have a year of linguistics, eh?
WoooooOOOooooooOOOoooooh! Jerry! Jerry!
So, how many languages do you speak?
Uncle Davey
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