- Language and thought
A variety of different authors, theories and fields purport influences between language and thought.
Many point out the seemingly common-sense realization that upon introspection we seem to think in the
language we speak. A number of writers and theorists have extrapolated upon this idea.cientific theories
* The
Sapir-Whorf hypothesis inlinguistics states that the structure of one's mother-tongue influences the way one's mind perceives the world. It has found at best very limited experimental support, at least in its strong form. For instance, a study showing that speakers of languages lacking asubjunctive mood such as Chinese experience difficulty with hypothetical problems has been discredited. However, another study has shown that subjects in memory tests are more likely to remember a given color if their mother language includes a word for that color.* According to
Cognitive therapy , founded byAaron T. Beck , our emotions and behavior are caused by ourinternal dialogue . We can change ourselves by learning to challenge and refute our own thoughts, especially a number of specific mistaken thought patterns called "cognitive distortion s". Cognitive therapy has been found to be effective byempirical studies.* In
behavioral economics , according to experiments said to support to the theoreticalavailability heuristic , people believe more probable events that are more vividly described than those which were not. Simple experiments asking people to imagine something led them to believe it to be more likely. Themere exposure effect may also be relevant to propagandistic repetition like theBig Lie . According toprospect theory , people make different economic choices based on how the matter is framed.Other schools of thought
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General Semantics is a school of thought founded by engineerAlfred Korzybski and later popularized byS. I. Hayakawa and others, which attempted to make language more precise and objective. It makes many basic observations of theEnglish language , particularly pointing out problems of abstraction and definition.*
E-prime is aconstructed language identical to theEnglish language but lacking all forms of "to be", like Arabic. Its proponents claim thatdogma tic thinking seems to rely on "to be" language constructs, and so by removing it we may discourage dogmatism.*
Neuro-linguistic programming , founded byRichard Bandler , claims that language "patterns" and other things can affect thought and behavior. It takes ideas from General Semantics andhypnosis , especially that of the famous therapistMilton Erickson . Many do not consider it a credible study, and it has no empirical scientific support.* Advocates of
non-sexist language including some feminists say that the English language perpetuates biases against women, such as using male-gendered terms such as "he" and "man" as generic. Many authors including those who write textbooks now conspicuously avoid that practice, in the case of the previous examples using words like "he or she" or "they" and "human race".Political correctness is similar, but it is a loose culturalmeme and has never been formally codified. Both are considered widely controversial.Literature and philosophy
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George Orwell , the famous political writer, certainly believed in the interplay between language and thought. One of the most fundamental and enduring ideas of hisdystopia n novel "Nineteen Eighty-Four " was the control of "thoughtcrime " through omnipresent spying andpropaganda , and the created language "Newspeak ". The purpose of thisfictional language was to make thoughts unapproved by the state "literally unthinkable" by making language unable to express them. In a 1946 essay in which Orwell explores this topic further, "Politics and the English Language ", he wrote "if thought corrupts language, language can also corrupt thought."
*Ludwig Wittgenstein wrote in his "Tractatus Logico Philosophicus " that "the limits of my language indicate the limits of my world" and explores thephilosophy of language .
*Richard Mitchell , author and publisher of "The Underground Grammarian", argues throughout his writings that that "clear language engenders clear thought"; in other words, that " [w] ords never fail ... who speaks reason to his fellow men bestows it upon them. Who mouths inanity disorders thought for all who listen." [Mitchell, Richard. "Less than Words Can Say". Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1979. p. 5.]
*Ayn Rand 'snovella "Anthem" described a society which banned the use of the word "I", which had implications contrary to the goals of herobjectivist philosophy .ee also
* by Umberto Eco
*philosophy of language
*origin of language Other
* Various other schools of
persuasion directly suggest using language in certain ways to change the minds of others, includingoratory ,advertising ,debate ,sales , andrhetoric . The ancientsophist s discussed and listed many figures of speech such asenthymeme andeuphemism . The modernpublic relations term for adding persuasive elements to the interpretation of and commentary on news is called spin.References
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