This paper presents a simple model to estimate the number of languages that existed throughout history, and considers philosophical and linguistic implications of the findings. The estimated number is 150,000 plus or minus 50,000. Because only few of those remain, and there is no reason to believe that that remainder is a statistically representative sample, we should be very cautious about universalistic claims based on existing linguistic variation
We adopt a description of natural languages in terms of strings of crosslinguistically variable synt...
This paper begins from the observation that human communication systems are unique in the animal wor...
The article deals with the problem of counting languages with an eye to assessing the loss of langua...
This paper presents a simple model to estimate the number of languages that existed throughout histo...
What would your ideas about language evolution be if there was only one language left on earth? Fort...
The twenty-first century will witness an unprecedented decline in the diversity of the world’s langu...
The way we understand language diversity, how languages differ in representing reality, affects our ...
Languages have been on a rapid decline throughout the course of human history. Estimated to be as ma...
Talk of linguistic universals has given cognitive scientists the impression that languages are all b...
Talk of linguistic universals has given cognitive scientists the impression that languages are all b...
Ken Hale argued forcefully that linguistic diversity provides a crucial resource for linguistics. If...
There is no denying the great diversity of human languages and the deep differences among them, not ...
This article offers an integrational linguistic critique of the way in which the notions of linguist...
In When Languages Die, K. David Harrison illustrates the individual face of language loss, as well a...
A central goal of generative (Chomskian) linguistic theory is to describe the human capacity for lan...
We adopt a description of natural languages in terms of strings of crosslinguistically variable synt...
This paper begins from the observation that human communication systems are unique in the animal wor...
The article deals with the problem of counting languages with an eye to assessing the loss of langua...
This paper presents a simple model to estimate the number of languages that existed throughout histo...
What would your ideas about language evolution be if there was only one language left on earth? Fort...
The twenty-first century will witness an unprecedented decline in the diversity of the world’s langu...
The way we understand language diversity, how languages differ in representing reality, affects our ...
Languages have been on a rapid decline throughout the course of human history. Estimated to be as ma...
Talk of linguistic universals has given cognitive scientists the impression that languages are all b...
Talk of linguistic universals has given cognitive scientists the impression that languages are all b...
Ken Hale argued forcefully that linguistic diversity provides a crucial resource for linguistics. If...
There is no denying the great diversity of human languages and the deep differences among them, not ...
This article offers an integrational linguistic critique of the way in which the notions of linguist...
In When Languages Die, K. David Harrison illustrates the individual face of language loss, as well a...
A central goal of generative (Chomskian) linguistic theory is to describe the human capacity for lan...
We adopt a description of natural languages in terms of strings of crosslinguistically variable synt...
This paper begins from the observation that human communication systems are unique in the animal wor...
The article deals with the problem of counting languages with an eye to assessing the loss of langua...