Animal Studies in the Language Sciences

被引:0
作者
Prisca Augustyn
机构
[1] Florida Atlantic University,
来源
Biosemiotics | 2018年 / 11卷
关键词
Animal studies; Linguistics; Semiotics; Umwelt; Non-human intelligence; Animal linguistics;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This paper explains how recent changes in the ways we study other animals to better understand the human faculty of language are indicative of changing narratives concerning the intelligence of other animals. Uexküll’s concept of Umwelt as a species-specific model of the world is essential to understanding the semiotic abilities of all organisms, including humans. From this follows the view that human language is primarily a cognitive tool for making models of the world. This view is consistent with the basic premises of cognitive linguistics. The rejection of behaviorism in linguistics represents a turning point in the history of animal studies. The resulting criticism of long-term studies with primates illustrates this shift concerning the study of wild animals within the language sciences and beyond. New insights in dog cognition and research on the processing of human language in canines are reflective of a change in focus away from anthropocentrism towards the species-specific semiotic abilities of animals in the twenty-first century. This new orientation away from comparing animal sign-systems to human language and the importance of studying intelligent wild animals in the wild instead of in captivity have lead to an important re-evaluation of our relationship with other animals and our views of their cognitive and semiotic profiles. This leads to questions such as what role non-human organisms can play in the language sciences, and what our limitations are of studying the sign systems of other animals. Recent research on the signifying abilities of wild dolphins, for instance, has identified a new set of characteristics by which to study intelligence in other species.
引用
收藏
页码:121 / 138
页数:17
相关论文
共 37 条
[1]  
Abramson JZ(2018)Imitation of novel conspecific and human speech sounds in the killer whale (Orcinus Orca), January 31 2018-1032
[2]  
Andics A(2016)Neural mechanisms of lexical processing in dogs Science 353 1030-32
[3]  
Gábor A(2011)Language and brain: Recasting meaning in the definition of human language Semiotica 184 11-17
[4]  
Gácsi M(2009)Uexküll, Peirce, and other affinities between biolinguistics and biosemiotics in Biosemiotics 3 1-27
[5]  
Faragó T(2014)What makes an alien intelligent? The New Yorker April 21 2014-58
[6]  
Szabó D(2015)Do they speak language? Biosemiotics 8 9-22
[7]  
Miklósi Á(1959)Review of Language 35 26-21
[8]  
Andrews E(2005) by B.F. Skinner Linguistic Inquiry 36 1-32
[9]  
Augustyn P(2007)Three factors in language design International Journal of Philosophical Studies. 15 1-404
[10]  
Berreby D(1976)Biolinguistic explorations: Design, development, and evolution Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 280 20-1059