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Title: Wolfgang Wildgen The Evolution of Meaning and Discourse


1
Wolfgang WildgenThe Evolution of Meaning and
Discourse
  • Cognitive Science
  • Case Western Reserve University, 3rd of October
    2007

2
Contents
  • 1. Introduction Catastrophic transitions in the
    evolution of life
  • 2. From image to concept Thoms concepts of
    salency and pregnance
  • 3. An illustrative fragment of catastrophe
    theoretic semantics
  • 3.1 Changes in a quality space
  • 3.2 The archetype of transfer and trivalent
    scenarios
  • 4. From tool-manufacturing to propositional
    semantics
  • 4.1 Instrumentality in higher mammals and man
  • 4.2 Is tool-making a pragmatic source of
    propositional semantics?
  • 5. The evolution of discourse
  • 5.1 From ecological space to social pragmatics
  • 5.2 From social pragmatics to discourse
  • 5.3 A possible hierarchy of discourse functions
  • 6. Consequences for an evolutionary grammar

3
Introduction
  • Language, the exchange of meaningful messages,
    the systematic reference to a world beyond
    ourselves, the reflection on our use of language
    is a dramatic step beyond the behavior and the
    psychic states of other creatures and beyond the
    material world. It was therefore a major
    challenge for evolutionary thinking first during
    the controversies of the 18th century (Condillac,
    Rousseau, Diderot, Herder), later for Darwin and
    his followers. The central problem concerns the
    apparent perfection of human language and the
    difficulty to explain preparatory stages and
    their adaptive value.
  • I will start with a parallel problem due to
    perfection and the lack of transition which
    concerns a much earlier step in evolution the
    evolution of the eye during the so-called
    Cambrian revolution some 500 my ago (cf. Park,
    2005).

4
  • Charles Darwin in the Origin of Species (1859)
    treated the eye under the heading ORGANS OF
    EXTREME PERFECTION AND COMPLICATION. He admits
    that the idea that it has been created by natural
    selection is absurd to the highest degree.
  • The Cambrian revolution affected only six out of
    38 phyla, but 95 of multicellular animals
    existing today have eyes. Therefore, it is
    probably the most decisive evolutionary step in
    the last billion years. Vision, i.e., the faculty
    to form images of selected aspects of the
    environment, triggered on arms-race which shaped
    bodies, behaviors, enhanced the control and
    perception of motion (a visually guided attack or
    escape) and created the world of colors we
    experience. In a sense, it created a world of
    meanings centered in the brains of animals (a
    kind of virtual reality)

5
Figure 1 The rough evolution of receptors for
different sense organs in geological time
(graphics from Parker, 2005)
6
  • I will argue in the next section that the origin
    of language (roughly 2 my BP) produced a
    comparable catastrophic jump which could become
    the basis of evolutionary processes (losses and
    gains) in the future (the next millions of
    years).
  • In the case of vision two subfields are
    coordinated and cannot be reduced to one another
  • The physics of light/refraction/absorption, etc.
  • The psychophysics of perception and the
    neurodynamics of image formation, storage and
    imagination.
  • I will argue that with the emergence of language
    a third, non reducible domain is added, cultural
    significance and meaning. Therefore, any theory
    of language has to consider at least three levels
    and the context of their emergence.

7
  • The physics of light emergence shortly after the
    Big Bang with the appearance of stars (other
    physical fields relevant for perception follow
    later, thus sound fields for hearing or chemical
    fields for smell and taste).Cf. Guths
    inflationary universe. The inflationary stage
    is followed by a dark age and later the creation
    of stars which emit light.
  • The (neuro)psychology of image-formation
    emergence in the Cambrian revolution 500 my BP
    (later auditory gestalts rival with visual ones
    for dominance)
  • The cultural significance of sign-behavior and
    meaningful social communication emergence 2 my
    BP (probably both in the auditory and the visual
    mode the auditory becomes dominant in humans).
  • The architecture of a theory of language has to
    consider these levels.

8
From image to concept
  • The Cambrian revolution created an image making
    machine which became the motor of evolutionary
    diversity and which controlled body shapes, color
    displays, camouflage, mimicry, pursuit and escape
    behaviors, social identification, and social
    cooperation. In a sense, the image-machine became
    the functional heart of higher organized animals
    and it is still at the heart of human behavior
    and culture.
  • One may distinguish two factors in these
    dynamics, one is linked to the perceptual organ
    and neuronal centers (e.g., the eye, the visual
    pathway, area 7 and its projections), the other
    is linked to selectional forces, such as feeding,
    hunting prey, protection against predators, and
    sexual reproduction. René Thom (1991/2003) called
    these two forms salency (sensory apparatus)
    and pregnancy (biological needs). The major
    criteria of distinction are

9
  • Thom compares subjective pregnancies found in
    animals (and man) with objective pregnancies
    (forces) in nature. Linguistic meaning (concepts)
    which are necessary to form propositions by
    predication are at a point of convergence between
    biological pregnancies, natural forces, motion
    patterns and geometric forms

10
subjective
objective
free isotropic propagation diffusion
temperaturesoundchemical diffusion
biological pregnances
odor, taste, touch
physical fieldse.g. lightstate transitions
controlled propagation
color
valence-patterns
motion of solid bodies
constrained propagation
concepts words and syntax
phonetic gestalts
no propagation
geometrical forms
written words
11
The Lower Paleolithic revolution
  • In humans and mainly in speaking humans this
    strict dependency on biological pregnancies
    disappears and the question is How did the
    propagation of meaning become to a large extent
    independent from basic survival mechanisms?
  • As we assume that this transition was prepared in
    the stage of Homo erectus (2 my BP), biologically
    fixed with the speciation of Homo sapiens (ca.
    300.000 y BP) and fully unfolded since the
    populations of cave painters (ca. 40.000 y BP),
    we can call it the (Lower) Paleolithic
    revolution.
  • This does not mean that the creation of meaning
    lost its biological significance but the Rubicon
    between a biologically controlled meaning
    propagation and a cultural control and social
    embedding of meaning has been crossed in this
    period (2 my-40.000 y BP).

12
The catastrophic transition to language
Non-language
Language
Communicative capacities
2 my BP to 40.000 y BP
Evolutionary time scale since the Cambrian
revolution
13
Thoms conjecture
  • René Thom conjectured that the lexico-syntactic
    valences described by Tesnière (1959) or the
    case-frames enumerated by Fillmore (1968) are
    basically a reflection of restrictions imposed on
    natural processes. This hypothesis underlies
    catastrophe theoretic semantics (cf. Wildgen,
    1982). In semiotic terms, the relational
    architecture underlying language has a foundation
    in natural laws, or more provocatively, the
    archetypical architecture of linguistic
    utterances (sentences) is rooted in natural laws,
    it is an icon of the real world in which human
    beings live.
  • As a corollary this explains why humans endowed
    with language are able to discover natural laws,
    use them for technology and control the ambient
    world which for all other beings, including
    non-human hominids, is opaque and just an
    all-mighty force which beings must endure
    passively.

14
An illustrative fragment of catastrophe theoretic
semantics
  • The valence pattern is globally described as a
    conflict of pregances in Thom (1978c 76). If
    these conflicts are stripped off their specific
    intentional and real-life content, a formal
    topologico-dynamic pattern is left, which can be
    matched against the hierarchy of elementary
    catastrophes in Thom (1972). These archetypes
    (cf. for elaborations, Wildgen, 1982) are pure
    theoretical entities, which allow the formulation
    of a family of interesting hypotheses. Like the
    theoretical terms used in physics, they formulate
    a program of empirical research, such that some
    of the hypotheses formulated in these terms may
    be elaborated or falsified (cf. Wildgen, 1994,
    for relevant elaborations and corrections of the
    theoretical conjectures generated by Thom).

15
(a) to distort, to bend (German verbiegen) scales
qualitative scale _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ - straight twisted, crooked
(b) to clean ( German reinigen)
qualitative scale - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ dirty clean, neat
If we assume a linear space with two poles we can
describe the process contained in the two verbs
above in the way shown in Figure 4. The curved
surface above describes the states of stability
and instability (the attractors and the repellors
of the system). The process makes a catastrophic
jump from one partial surface to another (e.g.
from 'dirty' to 'clean').
16
The archetype of transfer and trivalent scenarios
17
Evolutionary explanation of Thoms conjecture
  • Thoms assumption is on one side tempting,
    because it could provide a much deeper foundation
    of linguistics than any current theory, but on
    the other side it cannot explain how human
    language could become a mirror of natural
    processes. In Wildgen (2004) I proposed a
    transition mediated by tool making and early
    technologies. In fact, language has not emerged
    in isolation, it rather came together with other
    symbolic forms (a term coined by Cassirer) like
    myth (ritual), art and technology. Lithic
    technologies used since more than 2 my could
    stand for a first stage (possibly in the context
    of rituals, an early proto-language and
    body-painting).
  • Insofar as such technologies asked for a precise
    control of natural forces, human symbolic
    behavior was at the start parallel to a kind of
    scientific insight and corresponding conceptual
    elaborations.

18
From tool-manufacturing to propositional
semantics
  • In the evolutionary line of primates, tool-use is
    reported both for new world apes and old world
    apes. The first show only the behavior of
    throwing objects (from above down to the bottom
    of trees) in attack and defense, whereas the
    second show a higher diversity of tool uses (cf.
    Becker, 1993 79-110). Rather sophisticated
    tool-use with beginning tool modifying is
    reported by Boesch (1993), who describes the
    nut-cracking behavior of wild chimpanzees of the
    Taï National Park (Côte dIvoire). The animals
    transport both nuts and hammers to roots, which
    are used as anvil. As stone hammers are rare and
    necessary to crack very hard nuts (Panda oleosa),
    they are transported and preserved. Wooden
    hammers may be shortened using fallen branches
    until they fit. Infants must learn the use of
    tools and different ways of passing on the proper
    method of use have been observed stimulation,
    facilitation, and active teaching.

19
Is tool-making a source of propositional
semantics?
  • Basic script of tool manufacturing
  • Seeking for materials.
  • Using both hands, such that one hand fixes the
    material, which has to be shaped, and the other
    controls a tool used for shaping.
  • The tool is adapted to specific contexts it
    becomes the blade of a knife, the point of an
    arrow, the body of an ax, etc., or it is used to
    perform one phase of a process, e.g., cleaning
    the fur of an animal the fur is already the
    result of a longer goal-oriented process
    beginning with the hunting of the animal. The
    mastering of tool-production allows the
    production of cultural objects and art these may
    become objects of value. Elaborated tools and
    objects of art show geometrical abstraction and
    iconicity.
  • A further stage produces pictures (signs) of the
    hand, the instrument which shapes tools.

20
Simple pebble tools from the Olduwan-gorge
(around 2 my BP)
Refined and small tools from the
Magdalenian-culture (around 16.000 y. BP)
21
The evolution of discourse
  • The pragmatics of action with hands establishes a
    micro-level of emerging functions which elaborate
    the relation between cause and effect.
  • At the macro-level human housing and
    house-building is a domain where structures
    emerge, which can be reorganized in the shape of
    space-oriented communication, linguistic
    orientation in space and memory of narrative
    contents related to space.
  • The background of these processes is given by the
    ecological/situational context. Some objects or
    context features become culturally significant.
    These are mainly
  • places (of living, of chase, etc.),
  • tools and the techniques of their use,
  • motion patterns, gestures, gestured signs, dance,
  • The relevance of places (in space and time), of
    spatial orientation and categorization are of
    primordial importance for the semantics of
    natural languages as the tradition of localistic
    theories shows.

22
  • Already in the last common ancestor of humans and
    chimpanzees (LCA), contextual space acts as an
    external memory of affordances, which is
    indexically given by paths (of social locomotion
    and predator/prey-locomotion), harvesting
    locations (and times), dangerous locations,
    places for sleep, courtship, housing, frontiers
    of territories, etc. These indexically loaded
    areas and places function like a catalyst of
    social action, insofar as they can coordinate
    social perception and action.
  • As soon as space is more specifically organized
    in relation to cognition and social use, it
    unfolds in a cycle of social investment.
    Architecture and the spatial organization of a
    village (or later a town) are clear examples.
    This level is autocatalytic insofar as the
    spatial organization becomes itself a cyclic
    structure in which different functions cooperate.

23
Semiotically invested subspaces
housing
fire place
myth. space
public space
ritual
tool making
outside
chase, harvest
24
From social pragmatics to discourse
  • Tool manufacturing, body art and rituals may be
    either preadaptations enabling the emergence of
    language or already be parallel and fostered by a
    protolanguage. Due to the non-permanent nature of
    spoken language, we have no chance to check which
    of the alternatives is valid. The fact that
    language usage is primarily a social
    communicative phenomenon encourages the search
    for a cultural/social origin of language and
    discourse. In this perspective it is not
    predication or propositional structure, but
    discursive processing in social contexts which
    must be foregrounded.
  • Therefore, one must ask, if discourse functions
    like narrative, descriptive, argumentative or
    ritual discourse had a survival value in early
    human populations (before hominisation), which
    differs sharply from the survival patterns in
    chimpanzees and other primates which did not
    evolve a linguistic capacity.

25
A possible hierarchy of discourse functions
  • Classical speech-act theories placed the
    proposition (and its elocution) at the center and
    added illocution and perlocution. The perlocution
    (the impact on the audience) and its social
    effects are neglected. The relation of language
    use to its contextual evaluation and thus to its
    selective relevance is excluded. An evolutionary
    account must start from perlocutionary effects,
    like A persuades / convinces B (via an
    utterance), A evokes positive feelings / gets
    help /in/by B (via an utterance) A contributes
    verbally to the solution of a problem / teaches /
    helps to find a solution (via an utterance).
  • If the perlocutionary effect is increasing the
    fitness of the group, such a feature (and the
    underlying faculty) can be selected. As no other
    human species with lesser communicative faculties
    exists, it is impossible to test the selective
    advantage our species got and why. The only
    approach which is feasible concerns the analysis
    of actual discursive effects.

26
  • If the scout can describe the place and number of
    a herd of bison accurately, the group will follow
    him and bring food to the clan, which will not
    starve and thus survive.
  • If the experienced warrior can give a good story
    for his undertakings others will join a new
    enterprise and learn from his experience how to
    overcome the enemy.
  • If the perpetrator can defend his cause
    effectively he will not be expelled or killed.
  • These examples show three different discourse
    functions descriptive, narrative and
    argumentative.

27
Discourse as basic achievement
  • My hypothesis is that rhetoric (and possibly
    poetic) functions stood at the beginning when
    discourse emerged. I will only discuss he
    narrative function in the folowing.
  • The central concern in the narrative is
  • How can a sequence of events/actions be
    segmented/compressed into sentences?
  • How are these arranged such that not only the
    temporal sequence can be derived but also spatial
    itineraries and causal effects can be imagined or
    reproduced? The problem concerns a mapping of
    time, space and cause/force in a text such that
    an easy and reliable understanding by the
    audience is made possible.

28
Evaluative and relevance functions
  • This is, however, not sufficient. In each
    narrative text, evaluative and relevance
    assigning processes have to be controlled. As
    Labov (1972) has shown, the Abstract/Title must
    sketch the relevance of the story which will be
    told, the Climax separates the Complication and
    the Result and spans an arch of interest for the
    audience. In many cases, self-evaluative
    information is distributed over the story, etc.
    Thus even simple stories contain two components
  • Time/space/force mappings
  • A socio-evaluative profile or a relevance
    component in which social values are exchanged
    (respecting the audience and self-advertisement)

29
  • These factors point into the direction of a
    twofold functionality of (narrative) discourse.
    It has a referential function (mapping a sequence
    of events/actions) and a socio-evaluative
    function. In the emergence of (narrative)
    discourse, two different selective processes must
    have cooperated. If in small talk the
    socio-evaluative component dominates, this does
    not mean (as Dunbar suggests) that discourse
    emerged from social contact (grooming).
  • The two factors have probably different
    evolutionary histories. The referential function
    elaborates cognitive functions already developed
    since the Cambrian revolution (helped by bigger
    brain, which was made possible by high energy
    food and allowed for the construction of
    sophisticated tools). A further function is based
    on the evolution of social groups and their
    organization and more specifically of
    cooperative/competitive processes in dense social
    networks.
  • The key to the solution, the social organization
    of human populations 300.000 y ago and that of
    neighboring human species in competition with
    them is not accessible empirically.

30
Consequences for an evolutionary grammar
  • A grammar is called evolutionary, if its
    architecture reflects the order in which
    important linguistic features emerged and
    respects the natural (causal) relations between
    components which were selected at different
    stages (e.g., 2 my, 500.000 y, 100.000 y,
    50.000 y, 5.000 y BP).
  • In conclusion of the facts and hypotheses exposed
    in this lecture, a grammar should first consider
    the cognitive basics, i.e., the mapping of space,
    time, force (cause) into a language.
  • Secondly, it should pay attention to discourse
    organization in relation to social functions of
    language.

31
Self-organization and the arbitrariness of
languages
  • The basic factors which shaped human language led
    to numberless but functionally equivalent
    individual languages/dialects/jargons/repertoires,
    etc. This feature was called the arbitrariness
    of the linguistic sign by Ferdinand de Saussure.
  • In reality it is only the effect of multiple
    processes of self-organization which fulfill the
    basic cognitive and social functions. As the set
    of concepts grows, and at the same pace the
    length of utterances, the fine-grained structure
    of languages is only grossly constrained by the
    basic functions. Internal measures of economy and
    optimality select one or several solutions and by
    a law of conservation the system stops the search
    for other solutions.
  • The differences between languages are the
    out-come of a process weakly constrained by the
    basic functions and selected by mechanisms of
    self-organization, which allow for many
    equivalent solutions.

32
Some bibliographical hints
  • Labov, William, 1972. The Transformation of
    Experience in Narrative Syntax, chapter 9 of
    Labov, W., Language in the Inner City. Studies in
    the Black English Vernacular. Philadelphia
    University of Pennsylvania Press, 354-396.
  • Parker, Andrew, 2005. Seven Deadly Colours. The
    Genius of Natures Palette and How it Eluded
    Darwin, Free Press, London.
  • Thom, René, 1990. Semiophysics a sketch,
    Addison-Wesley, Redwood City, Calif
  • Wildgen, Wolfgang, 1982. Catastrophe Theoretic
    Semantics. An Elaboration and Application of René
    Thoms Theory, Benjamins, Amsterdam/Philadelphia.
  • Wildgen, Wolfgang, 1994. Process, Image, and
    Meaning. A Realistic Model of the Meanings of
    Sentences and Narrative Texts, Benjamins,
    Amsterdam/Philadelphia.
  • Wildgen, Wolfgang, 2004a. The Evolution of Human
    Languages. Scenarios, Principles, and Cultural
    Dynamics, Benjamins, Amsterdam/Philadelphia.
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