FUNKNET] analysis: unhappiness

Mark P. Line mark at polymathix.com
Mon Sep 13 00:16:10 UTC 2010


Aya --

You said: "Other tools can be studied separately from the people who use
them or created them. Why not language?"

Although language can certainly be considered a tool, I think it's unlike
other tools in several very significant respects.

1. Although we're not born with language, we can't avoid (pathologies
excluded) acquiring it unless we're not exposed to it. To that extent,
language is a biological phenomenon. A prototypical tool is not a
biological phenomenon, so I'm not sure how valid any conclusions might be
that are drawn from a premise of language-as-tool.

2. A tool is as a tool does: Anything is a tool that is being used as a
tool, including dead wombats, broken screwdrivers or decks of playing
cards. (Completing the imagined scenarios is left as an exercise for the
reader...) So saying that language is a tool is only saying that language
is used as a tool. Quite a few conclusions can be and have been drawn from
the fact that language is used as a tool, but I would have to be convinced
in detail that almost everything worth knowing about language is dependent
on the premise of language-as-tool.

3. If language is a "tool" for (say) communicating ideas, then eating is a
"tool" for reducing hunger. In both cases, I worry about the tool metaphor
being stretched so far from the prototype that we're left with an
out-and-out category fallacy.

4. More prototypical tools can be studied separately from those who use or
create them because those tools are easily observed separately from those
who use or create them. I don't think the same thing can be said of
language -- very little about language can be observed apart from its use,
so very little about language can be observed apart from its user(s).

5. Any proposal to study something as complex as language separately from
its embodiment is suspicious to me, smacking of reductionism -- something
up with which linguistics has had to put a tad much. Anything that puts
language back into its human context would be a step forward.


-- Mark

Mark P. Line



A. Katz wrote:
> Tom,
>
> I understand the uncomfortable association with Chomsky that speaking of
> language apart from people can have. Competence versus performance, the
> way Chomsky used those terms, never made sense. But that's precisely
> because
> he associated "competence" with the brain and suggested that it was hard
> wired there -- when there was never any evidence of that.
>
> However, if we don't distinguish language from humans, and language
> processing from language data, then how are we going to judge artificial
> language-using devices as to their efficacy at producing and interpreting
> language? How are we going to determine whether and to what extent a
> non-human has acquired language?
>
> We aren't born with it. We don't embody it. It's a tool that we use to
> communicate. Other tools can be studied separately from the people who use
> them or created them. Why not language?
>
> --Aya
>
>
>
>
> On Sun, 12 Sep 2010, Tom Givon wrote:
>
>>
>>
>>
>> I wonder whether asking "how does language work?" is really a meaningful
>> question without  asking "how does the language user work?"  One of the
>> worst
>> legacies good ol' Noam stuck us with is his (really, Saussure's)
>> distinction
>> of competence ("language", "knowledge") vs. performance ("language
>> user",
>> "processing"). It purported to limit linguists to the armchair methods
>> that
>> study competence, and relegated to psychology the quantified,
>> distributional/variationist methods that study behavior, processing and
>> on-line communication. The first breach in this artificial
>> methodological
>> wall occurred, leastwise for some of us, when we discovered the
>> intermediate
>> method of quantified studies of text, interaction, and conversation. As
>> an
>> ex-biologist, I am forever puzzled by the methodological purism we sill
>> seem
>> to embrace in linguistics, in the face of the manifest complexity and
>> connectivity of language (mind, brain, culture, sociality, evolution,
>> etc.).
>> In biology, another extremely complex science with multiple connections
>> (chemistry, geology, paleontology, behavior, sociality, economics,
>> evolution,
>> etc.), ANY method is welcome so long as it does the job of furthering
>> our
>> understanding. And by understanding we mean ever-wider circles of
>> connectivity.
>>
>> Best,  TG
>> ================
>>
>>
>> A. Katz wrote:
>>> Chris,
>>>
>>> Thanks for addressing this question. I understand that many, many
>>> linguists
>>> are quite properly and approriately interested in this ultimate
>>> question:
>>> "How does the language user work?" (I am also intetested in this
>>> question
>>> some of the time.)
>>>
>>> My point is that "how does language work?" is also a valid question,
>>> and a
>>> central one to the field of linguistics. These two questions are not at
>>> all
>>> the same.
>>>
>>> Let me be very explicit: My aim is to separate out the "human" from the
>>> "language". There are many good reasons to do so. For anyone working in
>>> computerized language processing or in non-human language studies, this
>>> is
>>> a significant point.
>>>
>>> It does not matter if a computerized language processing system even
>>> remotely simulates what humans do with language in their brains. It
>>> does
>>> matter whether it comes up with comparable or indistinguishable
>>> results.
>>>
>>> It does not matter whether a parrot, a dolphin or a chimpanzee is doing
>>> the
>>> same things inside the same modules in his brain as a human does. It
>>> does
>>> matter if the results are functionally equivalent.
>>>
>>> We need to make that distinction, between humans and their language, or
>>> we
>>> will be caught inside a circular definition with no way to break out or
>>> to
>>> prove anything, not about others and not about ourselves!
>>>
>>>    --Aya
>>>
>>> http://hubpages.com/hub/What-Constitutes-Proof-in-Ape-Language-Studies
>>>
>>>
>>> On Sun, 12 Sep 2010, Chris Butler wrote:
>>>
>>>> Aya, I think two different things are getting a bit mixed up here.
>>>>
>>>> I don't for a moment dispute that expressions are often susceptible to
>>>> multiple interpretations, that these interpretations are guided by all
>>>> kinds of contextual information, or that different people, or even the
>>>> same person at different times, may end up selecting differently from
>>>> the
>>>> various interpretations. Your example 'Open happiness' in another
>>>> contribution to this thread illustrates these points very well.
>>>>
>>>> My point, though, is that each of these different interpretations, as
>>>> well
>>>> as the selection of one (or more) as more likely in a particular
>>>> context,
>>>> is achieved through mechanisms in the interpreter's brain which
>>>> evolved in
>>>> the course of the phylogenetic development of language in the human
>>>> species, and developed ontogenetically in that particular
>>>> interpreter's
>>>> brain. It is surely likely that those mechanisms are highly similar in
>>>> different human beings, even though there may be differences in the
>>>> detailed wiring in different brains. What I'm saying is that in order
>>>> to
>>>> answer the question 'How do we communicate using language?' or, if you
>>>> prefer, 'How does the language user work?', we need to investigate
>>>> what
>>>> those mechanisms are, and this is what psycholinguists can help us
>>>> with.
>>>>
>>>> In particular, as linguists, we are interested (well, some of us are,
>>>> though clearly not all) in whether the constructs we posit in our
>>>> theories
>>>> of language have psychological validity in the sense that they
>>>> correspond
>>>> to ways in which aspects of language are represented in the brain. [As
>>>> an
>>>> aside, I do realise that there are linguists who strenuously resist
>>>> what
>>>> they see as a misguided emphasis on mental representation in the work
>>>> of
>>>> cognitive scientists, but it seems clear that language must be
>>>> represented
>>>> in some way in the brain in order that we can engage in the
>>>> sociosemiotic
>>>> acts of meaning making which are the primary focus for many of these
>>>> critics.] Taking your 'Open happiness' examples again, I think we need
>>>> answers to questions such as: What kind of representation does the
>>>> human
>>>> language processing system have for 'open' and for 'happiness'? Are
>>>> the
>>>> phonological, syntactic, semantic and pragmatic (for those who
>>>> distinguish
>>>> the semantic from the pragmatic) properties of these items (and we
>>>> might
>>>> want to add 'for this particular interpreter', though there must be
>>>> similarities across interpreters for communication to be possible)
>>>> represented in the same or different ways, in the same or different
>>>> locations (or sets of distributed locations)? Indeed, are we right in
>>>> thinking that these familiar levels of linguistic description must be
>>>> differentiated, as such, in the human language processing system? Does
>>>> the
>>>> representation for 'open' distinguish between what we call verbal and
>>>> adjectival uses of this item, and if so how? Or are syntactic analyses
>>>> computed on the fly, using semantic and contextual clues, rather than
>>>> the
>>>> neural equivalent of pigeon holes corresponding to verbs and
>>>> adjectives?
>>>> Is 'happiness' represented as 'happy + ness', or in its entirety, or
>>>> both?
>>>> All these questions, and many many more, are relevant to the
>>>> construction
>>>> of a model of language which reflects how language users communicate
>>>> (as,
>>>> of course, are a whole set of other questions about the sociocultural
>>>> aspects of communication).  I am not a psycholinguist, but my all too
>>>> superficial reading in the area suggests that psycholinguists have
>>>> gone
>>>> some of the way towards answering some of the questions we might want
>>>> to
>>>> ask, but that there is still a long way to go.
>>>>
>>>> Chris
>>>> --------------------------------------------------
>>>> From: "A. Katz" <amnfn at well.com>
>>>> Sent: Saturday, September 11, 2010 3:18 PM
>>>> To: "Chris Butler" <cbutler at ntlworld.com>
>>>> Cc: "FUNKNET" <funknet at mailman.rice.edu>
>>>> Subject: Re: [FUNKNET] FUNKNET] analysis: unhappiness
>>>>
>>>>> The problem is that once we achieve the psycholinguistic goal and see
>>>>> what
>>>>> is happening in each person's head, and we see that conflicting
>>>>> analyses
>>>>> are the norm, rather than the exception, among normal language
>>>>> speakers,
>>>>> then we will realize that the way language works to transmit
>>>>> information
>>>>> is despite individual differences and not because of uniform
>>>>> processing
>>>>> strategies.
>>>>>
>>>>> Even when all are agreed as to the meaning of an utterance, they do
>>>>> not
>>>>> process it the same way. Which means that processing is seocndary to
>>>>> information transmission.
>>>>>
>>>>>   --Aya
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Sat, 11 Sep 2010, Chris Butler wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Dick's comment that "this discussion raises the really fundamental
>>>>>> question of what kind of thing we think language is: social or
>>>>>> individual" is, it seems to me, an important one, particularly for
>>>>>> those
>>>>>> of us who are committed functionalists. My own view is that a truly
>>>>>> functional model of language would be one which aims to account for
>>>>>> how
>>>>>> human beings communicate using language, or in other words tries to
>>>>>> answer the question which was posed by Simon Dik a long time ago
>>>>>> now,
>>>>>> but which was not tackled head-on in his own work: "How does the
>>>>>> natural
>>>>>> language user work?' In trying to answer this question we need to
>>>>>> accept
>>>>>> that language is BOTH social AND individual, and we need to explore
>>>>>> both
>>>>>> aspects to get as complete a picture as possible of how we
>>>>>> communicate
>>>>>> using language. We need to know BOTH how people create and respond
>>>>>> to
>>>>>> meanings and express those meanings in forms during social
>>>>>> interaction
>>>>>> AND the mechanisms which operate in the brains of individuals in
>>>>>> order
>>>>>> to make such interaction possible. Both are important parts of the
>>>>>> answer to the question 'How do we communicate using language?',
>>>>>> though
>>>>>> this particular thread of the Funknet discussion has concentrated
>>>>>> more
>>>>>> on the second aspect, and so will I.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> This doesn't mean that all the work linguists have done on
>>>>>> "exploring
>>>>>> the structure of a language so that I can understand how all the
>>>>>> bits
>>>>>> fit together" and "exploring the connections between items", as Dick
>>>>>> puts it, is useless - far from it. After all, the hypotheses that
>>>>>> psycholinguists test are based on ideas about what languages are
>>>>>> like.
>>>>>> But it does mean, in my view, that ultimately we need to get
>>>>>> evidence
>>>>>> that the constructs and analyses we propose are ones that are at
>>>>>> least
>>>>>> consistent with what we know of the  processes which go on when we
>>>>>> use
>>>>>> language. So I am with Matthew when he says that for him, "the only
>>>>>> sense in which an analysis can be "the correct analysis" is in terms
>>>>>> of
>>>>>> what is inside of people's heads". Of course, this doesn't imply
>>>>>> that
>>>>>> linguists should just give up their jobs until such time as we know
>>>>>> everything there is to know about language processing. But it does
>>>>>> mean
>>>>>> that we need to collaborate with psycholinguists, psychologists and
>>>>>> neurologists, as has also been pointed out by linguists such as Ray
>>>>>> Jackendoff, Asif Agha, Ewa Dabrowska and Jan Nuyts. [We also need to
>>>>>> collaborate much more with sociolinguists and sociologists, so that
>>>>>> we
>>>>>> can get a better handle on the sociocultural aspects of how we
>>>>>> communicate.]  And it also means that psycholinguists, for their
>>>>>> part,
>>>>>> need whenever possible to follow up tightly controlled lab
>>>>>> experiments
>>>>>> with studies under more naturalistic conditions, to avoid the
>>>>>> criticism
>>>>>> that what happens in artifical lab situations may not happen in
>>>>>> natural
>>>>>> communicative conditions.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I also agree with Dick when he says that "the differences between
>>>>>> individuals really matter", and with Lise when she points out that
>>>>>> "we
>>>>>> must also be careful not to idealize "what's in people's heads" as
>>>>>> if it
>>>>>> were a single coherent construct that we are trying to discover".
>>>>>> However, there are surely processing mechanisms which are common to
>>>>>> all
>>>>>> language users by virtue of the evolution of the language faculty
>>>>>> and
>>>>>> which constitute the "general processes" which Dick says
>>>>>> psycholinguists
>>>>>> are interested in.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On the issue of quantitative methodology, I'm sympathetic in general
>>>>>> to
>>>>>> Ted and Ev's views, though it does seem sensible to prioritise cases
>>>>>> in
>>>>>> terms of a hierarchy such as Brian suggests. One thing this means is
>>>>>> that we should be giving our university students of linguistics (and
>>>>>> some of our linguistics lecturers!) courses in quantitative aspects
>>>>>> of
>>>>>> linguistics that introduce them to the use of at least some of the
>>>>>> basic
>>>>>> statistical methods in language study, and I'm sure this is indeed
>>>>>> going
>>>>>> on in some enlightened places. To those who suspect this can't be
>>>>>> done
>>>>>> with maths-shy students who don't initially see the need for it, I
>>>>>> offer
>>>>>> my own experience, over quite a long period, of teaching such
>>>>>> courses to
>>>>>> people with little or no prior experience in quantitative
>>>>>> techniques.
>>>>>> For some years in the 1990s, I taught such courses to all
>>>>>> linguistics
>>>>>> students in an institution where we had many mature students who had
>>>>>> come into university level studies with non-standard qualifications,
>>>>>> and
>>>>>> were not well equipped for courses of this kind by their previous
>>>>>> experience. I'm glad to say that teaching the subject from their own
>>>>>> perspective as language students rather than that of the
>>>>>> statistician,
>>>>>> and explaining the reasons for doing things in particular ways
>>>>>> rather
>>>>>> than just presenting formulae, paid off in the end, so that most
>>>>>> students were able to appreciate the relevance of these courses and
>>>>>> to
>>>>>> turn in very creditable projects showing an understanding of
>>>>>> research
>>>>>> design and competence in the use of a range of basic statistical
>>>>>> techniques. And I still find that bright graduate students respond
>>>>>> well
>>>>>> to similar courses which incorporate some of the rather more
>>>>>> advanced
>>>>>> techniques needed for many real research projects in various areas
>>>>>> of
>>>>>> linguistics. But I may well be out of date with what is now already
>>>>>> happening in our fine institutions of higher education!
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Chris Butler
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>
>>
>
>


-- Mark

Mark P. Line
Bartlesville, OK



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