Book Read Free

Dark Matter of the Mind

Page 54

by Daniel L. Everett


  relevance theory, 271, 272

  religion, 46; absent among Pirahãs, 125; Wilson on, 319, 319n1. See also atheism/atheists; Christians/Christianity; theists

  Rembrandt, 98–99. See also art

  rhyming, 248

  Riau, 216–27. See also Pirahãs

  Richardson, Don, Eternity in Their Hearts, 46–47

  Richardson, Robert C., 314–15

  Rimrock study, 85–88, 91

  rituals, 83–84. See also anthropology; religion

  Rizzolatti, Giacomo, 241

  Robbins, Marty, 193–96

  Rokeach, Milton, 85, 88, 90

  roles, cultural vs. natural basis of, 113–14. See also culture(s); nature

  rules, 102, 172, 207–8, 238, 273; grammatical, 201–2, 293n6; on Hindus’ farming; as innate language, 34; language as, 58; phonological, 299–300; in Pirahã language, 207–11; prescriptive, 113. See also culture(s); language(s); linguistics

  Ryle, Gilbert, 27, 138, 140

  Sahih Muslim. See Islam/Muslims

  Sapir, Edward, 4, 6, 9, 55–57, 70–71, 110, 135, 198, 202, 203, 204, 292; on gestures, 234; The Psychology of Culture, 56–57. See also anthropology; Chomsky, Noam; linguistics

  Sateré (tribe), 134

  Saussure, Ferdinand de, 168, 176, 199, 237. See also language(s); linguistics

  “scaffolding” (Berent), 302. See also phonological core knowledge

  Schama, Simon: on cultural value(s), 70; The Embarrassment of Riches: An Interpretation of Dutch Culture in the Golden Age, 70

  scheme(s), conceptual, 89; of generalizations, 114

  scholar(s): biblical, 263–64; research by, 45, 231–34, 251–54. See also Bible; and individual names

  Schweder, Richard, on culture, 66n2. See also culture(s)

  science, 41, 68, 86, 102; cognitive, 54; and culture, 69; dark matter and, 150–57; vs. God, 104; linguistics as, 291–92; vs. philosophy, 49. See also biology; linguistics; philosophy; religion

  self, 5, 8, 10, 16, 25, 66; construction of, 18, 122, 126; Hinduism on (atman), 318, 319; image of, 138, 142; vs. other, 109. See also individual; non-self

  semantics, 202–3; cultural, 94, 119, 260–70; generative, 202–3; not instinctive, 304–5; and translation, 262–65. See also Chomsky, Noam; language(s); linguistics

  Semitic (languages), 299–300. See also language(s)

  sensation(s), in Hinduism, 319. See also Hinduism/Hindus; perception

  sensory experience, 38, 131. See also blindness; gesture(s); perception; vision

  sentence(s), 206, 237, 289; as foundation of grammar, 204, 205, 253. See also Chomsky, Noam; discourse(s); linguistics; syntax

  Septuagint, 262–63. See also Bible

  sex: attraction precedes, 14; among Pirahãs, 113, 130–31, 195; among Samoans, 325. See also Pirahãs

  Shannon, Claude, 89

  “shareability” (Freyd), 247

  shared design (Berent), 301

  Sheldon, Steven, 212

  Shelley, Percy Bysshe, 248

  sign language. See homesigns (sign language)

  signs: symbols and, 176–77, 198–202, 255–56; three types of (Peirce), 176–77. See also linguistics; symbols

  Silbo, 222

  silence, required of women in church, 139–40. See also religion; women

  silent language, 4. See also language(s)

  Silverstein, Michael, 17; on grammar, 198–99; on indexicals, 177. See also linguistics

  skandhas (self), 13, 16. See also self

  Skinner, B. F., 48. See also Chomsky, Noam; psychology

  “sloppy phoneme effect” (Everett), 211

  slotting, 32–33, 235, 244–45

  smell, as perception, 16. See also perception

  smoking, 137

  smothering, 82–83. See also family; nurture

  social roles, in academe, 81, 92–93, 94. See also scholar(s)

  society: Pirahã concept of, 191, 192; as type of grammar, 93; Vygotsky vs. Piaget on language and, 131. See also anthropology; culture(s); language(s); linguistics; Pirahãs

  sociobiology, 320. See also biology

  sociolinguistics, 75, 177, 248. See also language(s); linguistics

  Socrates, 35. See also philosophy; Plato

  “solution space” (Chomsky), 48, 324–25

  son(s), learn from fathers, 206. See also children; men

  sonority, Berent on, 293–304, 294. See also phoneme(s)

  Sontag, Susan, 138, 268, 270. See also translation

  speech: contains grammar, 237; forms of, among Pirahãs, 132, 210; gestures and, 228–30, 237, 241–43; male vs. female, among Pirahãs, 177, 208, 208, 209–10; pantomime repels, 244; Sapir on, 203. See also channels; language(s); linguistics; Pirahãs; and individual categories

  Sperber, Dan, 271

  SSG (universal sonority sequencing generalization), 293–304, 294, 294n8, 294n9, 295. See also phoneme; sonority

  Stapert, Eugenie, 97

  stereotypes, 136–37

  Stich, Stephen, 286

  stimulus, poverty of, 275

  Story Listening System (SLS) (Cassell), 252. See also children

  storytelling: language and, 269; among Pirahãs, 132–33, 161–70. See also knowledge; language(s)

  structuralism, 205, 233; Chomskyan, 205–6. See also linguistics; sentence(s); structure(s)

  structure(s): as grammar of society/culture, 91–94, 93, 95; hierarchical, 96. See also culture; grammar; language(s); linguistics

  subject-verb-object/subject-object-verb (SVO/SOV), 257. See also grammar; language(s); linguistics; syntax

  supervenience, 214. See also culture; language; symbiosis

  syllable(s), 293, 293n7; Berent on sounds in, 293–96; Ohala on, 297; in Pirahã, 33, 138, 210. See also grammar; Pirahãs

  syllogism, 150–51. See also philosophy

  symbiosis, 214; between culture and grammar, 214–26; between grammar and gestures, 227–58; between language and culture, 270. See also culture(s); gesture(s); grammar; language(s)

  symbols: of (Dutch) culture, 98–99; of freedom, 196; “logos,” 144; as type of sign, 176–77, 198–202, 255–56; visual, 144, 150. See also culture(s); photography; signs

  syntagmeme(s), 248. See also C-syntagmeme

  syntax: Chomskyan theory of, 69, 86, 202–3; evolution of, 248–49; of Pirahãs, 198–226; and recursion, 215–16. See also Chomsky, Noam; language(s); linguistics; sentence(s)

  tabula rasa (blank slate), 12, 42, 52–53, 323. See also Aristotle

  tacit knowledge, 7, 7n4, 8, 11, 16, 32, 40; acquired vs. innate, 56–57; Aristotle rejects, 52; Bastian on, 41; Chomsky on, 24, 34–35, 48–49, 48n8; concepts of, 34–50; Freud on, 43; gestures as, 108; Locke rejects, 52; music as, 80–81; Polanyi on, 57–58; sources of, 24–25. See also dark matter; knowledge

  tacit language, 6, 7, 15; of grammar, 47. See also dark matter; knowledge; language(s); linguistics; tacit knowledge

  Takelma, 292

  talent, vs. instinct(s), 108, 284. See also instinct(s)

  taste, as perception, 15–16. See also perception

  teachers, of Pirahã language, 185, 213, 278. See also language(s); linguistics; Pirahãs; teaching; translation

  teaching, 15; English (Everett), 278; nonverbal, 206–7. See also teachers

  texts, 105; implicit knowledge in, 174–76; implicit values in, 161–70; of Pirahãs, 107, 178–93, 212–14. See also Pirahãs

  theft, of Brazil nuts, 182–84, 185, 189, 190, 193

  theist(s), 46. See also atheism/atheists; religion

  theory: of dark matter, 157; grammatical, summed up, 290n2. See also Chomsky, Noam; knowledge; languages(s); linguistics; relevance theory

  Thomason, Sarah Grey, 249–50

  Tillohash, Tony, 57, 292

  tonality, of Pirahã language, 209. See also language(s); linguistics; music; Pirahãs

  Tooby, John, 286–87; definition of “culture,” 68–70, 69n3, 75

  tools: conceptual, 114–15; as “congealed culture,” 1
04–5; of identity construction, 122; language as, 105, 122. See also language(s)

  Torás. See Pirahãs

  totemism, xiii, 130, 131. See also religion(s)

  Tower of Babel, 249. See also Bible; language(s)

  translation, 245, 259–79, 266n4, 271; of Bible, 262–64; controversies over, 262–64; difficulties, 264–67; dynamic, 268–69, 270; genres of, 267–70; importance of accurate, 190; impossible, 270–71, 276–78; ineffective, 224, 261–62; literal, 262; other-directed, 261–62; of Pirahã, 266–67, 270–71, 274–78; problems of, 274–78; of Quran, 267–68; radical, 274–78; self-directed, 260–61; Sontag on, 268, 270; von Martius’s, 266–67; word-for-word, 262, 264. See also language(s); linguistics

  transliteration, 264. See also mistranslation; Pirahãs; translation

  Treaty of Medicine Lodge Creek, 63–64, 67–68, 94

  Trilling, Lionel, on culture, 66n2

  Trudgill, Peter, 250

  Turing, Alan, 58, 101

  Turkana (tribe), 241

  Tylor, Edward, definition of culture, 76–77. See also culture(s)

  unconscious, 6. See also dark matter

  “unique design” (Berent), 303. See also phonological core knowledge

  universal base hypothesis (UBH), 203. See also semantics

  universal grammar (UG), 34–35, 47–48; Chomskyan, 86n5, 156–57, 205; Greenbergian, 86n5, 156–57; refuted, 310–11, 310n13. See also Chomsky, Noam; grammar; language(s); linguistics

  universalism, 87. See also values

  universality, 300–301, 305

  universals (linguistic). See Chomsky, Noam

  universal sonority sequencing generalization (SSG), innate in humans (Berent), 293–304

  Upanishads, 318. See also Bible; Hindu/Hinduism; religion

  ur-language, 249. See also Chomsky, Noam; humans; language(s); universality

  value ranking(s), 82–83, 84, 88–90. See also values

  values: American vs. Pirahã, 161–70; biological, 79–80, 85, 88; of dark matter, 157, 161–70; within family, 82; immanent, 85; implicit, 161–70; instrumental, 84–85; methodological requirements for, 85–99; national, 106; orientations, 86–87; ranked, 84–90; and sense of mission, 106; terminal, 84–85; universal, 87, 88, 89. See also dark matter; ranking

  “values study.” See Rimrock study

  van Dyck, Anthony, 99. See also art

  van Rijn, Rembrandt. See Rembrandt

  Van Valin, Robert D., 220, 220n7

  Van Veen, Stuyvesant, 231, 231n4

  variation, 25

  viewpoint: of character (CVPT), 243; of observer (OVPT), 243. See also gesture(s); speech

  virgin, controversy over translation of. See New Testament; translation

  vision: blindness, 239, 240; etics/emics of, 142; of photographic images, 142–44, 143, 144n4, 145n6. See also perception; photography

  voice-onset timing (VOT), 31–32. See also linguistics

  von Martius, Karl, translations by, 266–67. See also translation

  Vygotsky, Lev S., 235; vs. Piaget on language and society, 131. See also language(s)

  Wall Street Journal, on hippie culture as exemplified by Woodstock festival, 161–66

  Wari’, 153–54

  warranted true belief, 15–16

  wealth: caboclos vs. Christian attitudes toward, 325; earned from trading by caboclos, 185–86

  weapons: among Brazilian tribes, 134, 207; Pirahã arrows, 178–81. See also individual categories

  “whistle speech”: on Canary Islands, 222, 223; among Pirahã children, 132; among Pirahãs, 210. See also language(s); speech; and individual categories

  Whorf, Benjamin, 199, 324

  Wilkins, D., 240–41

  Wilson, Deirdre, 271

  Wilson, E. O., on human nature, 319, 320; On Human Nature, 319; on instincts, 321–22; Sociobiology: The New Synthesis, 320. See also human nature; instinct(s); religion

  Wittgenstein, Ludwig, 7, 198, 287; Blue Book, 289; Philosophical Investigations, 288; Tractatus Logic-Philosophicus, 288–89. See also philosophy

  “Wittgenstein’s shift,” 287. See also Wittgenstein, Ludwig

  women: Aboriginal sand art by, 252–53; Apostle Paul on, 139–40; and marital infidelity, 90, 187, 195–96, 195n7; Pirahã, 123–24, 177, 180, 208, 209; as property, 140; texts on Brazilian, 212–13. See also art; men; Pirahãs; sex; speech

  Woodstock music festival (1969), 161–68. See also music

  xenophobia, among Pirahãs, 125–26, 186. See also Pirahãs

  Yang, Charles, 316

  Yanomami (tribe), 124, 325

  “yell speech”: among Pirahã children, 132; among Pirahãs, 209. See also Pirahãs; speech; and individual categories

 

 

 


‹ Prev