- Symbiosism
Symbiosism is a
Darwinian theory of language that recognises language to be an organism residing in the human brain. Language is a memetic life form. By the Leiden School definition,memes are meanings, i.e.isofunctional neuroanatomical constructs corresponding tosigns in the sense ofFerdinand de Saussure . Meanings thrive, replicate incessantly and constitute the essence of language. An essential characteristic of memes is thatlinguistic meaning s have the nature of non-constructible sets in the mathematical sense and do not abide by constraints governingAristotelian logic such as the principle of the excluded middle. The Leiden conception of the meme contrasts with the Oxford definition as a unit of imitation, a behavioural notion that in Leiden is captured by the termmime . In contrast to memes, thefecundity of mimes as replicators and their fidelity of replication are limited, more so in pre-linguistic contexts.Language is a mutualist
symbiont and enters into a mutually beneficial relationship with its hominid host. Humans propagate language, whilst language furnishes the conceptual universe that informs and shapes the thinking of the hominid host. Language enhances the Darwinian fitness of the human species. Yet individual grammatical and lexical meanings and configurations of memes mediated by language may be either beneficial or deleterious to the biological host. The symbiosis is rendered more complex than just simple mutualism both by the physiological discrepancy between language as an overall condition and the nature of individual ideas conveyed through language as well as by the ecological difference between vertically and horizontally transmitted memes. The symbiotic theory of language propounded byGeorge van Driem grew out of the Leiden school of language evolution fathered byFrederik Kortlandt .Out of Symbiosism grew
Symbiomism , the philosophy about mind and man’s place in nature.Resources
van Driem, George. 2001. "Languages of the Himalayas: An Ethnolinguistic Handbook of the Greater Himalayan Region with an Introduction to the Symbiotic Theory of Language" (2 vols.). Leiden: Brill.
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Wiedenhof, Jeroen Maarten. 1996. Nexus and the birth of syntax, "Acta Linguistica Hafniensia", 28: 139-150. Click here to read: "http://www.wiedenhof.nl/ul/tk/pbl/articles/birthsyx.pdf"
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