Journal mercedo's Journal: Our Perception Determines How We Express 6
As to superiority of perception over languages
Scholars have long debated whether our native language affects how we perceive reality - and whether speakers of different languages might therefore see the world differently. The idea that language affects perception is controversial, and results have conflicted. A paper published this month in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences supports the idea - but with a twist.
- Press release from Eurekalert
By and large, they researchers overestimate the value of language. Our perception is the first thing, and it varies according to different people. So like so many perceptions, we humans developed languages differently. Language determines how we perceive?is just an opposit to phenomena. Our perception determines how we express it, thus develop different languages.
I was unable to understand English till age 20 or something. Of course I passed English test, but what I understood at that time was not an English, I was able to understand only Japanese, what I was able to do was just a way to translate English into Japanese, for me Japanese was the only meaning.
Around at age 20, I tried to understand English as English speakers do -not through translation but as it is. Now of course I understand English quite well.
As a man who was unable to understand English till age 21, it seems absurd for us to overestimate the role of language in perception. Perception isn't affected by language, but language is a reflection of what we perceived. Therefore when our perception varies, our language also varies. But even though language we use changes, our perception never changes. Our perception determines how we use our languages. Our perception is prior to our language.
At age twenty, I just realised I am unable to express what I perceive through Japanese -my native tongue, so I decided to learn English to express properly what I perceived. But throughout my childhood to the present day, my perception has never changed.
If someone thinks that our language determines how we see things, I can't help saying he is not a master of language, but language has been affecting him decisively, which is a pity.
English is also very nuanced (Score:2)
Re:English is also very nuanced (Score:1)
On the other hands, Chinese is not inflectional. We say it 'analytical', for example, in English we say, ' In the past I went to the park.' or just 'I went to the park.' In Chinese, we say ' In the past we go to the park.' So if it's in
Language (Score:2)
That is true, for a full-featured language such as English. Even if there is no word to describe what you want to describe, you can use a combination of words. Or poetry, for that matter.
George Orwell's "1984" was interesting for describing attempted control of how people think by controlling the language they used ("Newspeak [wikipedia.org]"
Re:Language (Score:1)
Korea under Japanese rule( 1905 -1945 ), Korean people were forced to use Japanese language. This was an assimilation policy devised by Japanese government. Basically whatever the languages we use, the nature underlying behind our language expression must be similar. That can't make many differences. If we d
Hey... (Score:1)
Re:Hey... (Score:1)