Language: The missing selection pressure

Q3 Arts and Humanities
J. Dessalles
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Human beings are talkative. What advantage did their ancestors find in communicating so much? Numerous authors consider this advantage to be "obvious" and "enormous". If so, the problem of the evolutionary emergence of language amounts to explaining why none of the other primate species evolved anything even remotely similar to language. What I propose here is to reverse the picture. On closer examination, language resembles a losing strategy. Competing for providing other individuals with information, sometimes striving to be heard, makes apparently no sense within a Darwinian framework. At face value, language as we can observe it should never have existed or should have been counter-selected. In other words, the selection pressure that led to language is still missing. The solution I propose consists in regarding language as a social signaling device that developed in a context of generalized insecurity that is unique to our species. By talking, individuals advertise their alertness and their ability to get informed. This hypothesis is shown to be compatible with many characteristics of language that otherwise are left unexplained.
语言:缺失的选择压力
人类是健谈的。他们的祖先在交流中发现了什么优势?许多作者认为这种优势是“明显的”和“巨大的”。如果是这样的话,语言的进化出现的问题就可以解释为什么没有其他灵长类动物进化出任何与语言相似的东西。我在这里的建议是把这幅图景颠倒过来。仔细一看,语言就像是一种失败的策略。在达尔文的框架内,为向其他人提供信息而竞争,有时努力让别人听到,显然是没有意义的。从表面上看,我们所观察到的语言不应该存在,或者应该被反选择。换句话说,导致语言产生的选择压力仍然缺失。我提出的解决方案是将语言视为一种社会信号装置,它是在人类特有的普遍不安全感背景下发展起来的。通过谈话,个人可以宣传他们的警觉性和获得信息的能力。这一假设被证明与语言的许多其他无法解释的特征是相容的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Theoria et Historia Scientiarum
Theoria et Historia Scientiarum Arts and Humanities-Language and Linguistics
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
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