In a message dated 3/30/2001 9:47:35 AM Central Standard Time,
Ti@fa-kuan.muc.de writes: BTW, don't you feel that the lengthyness of this discussion on {djuno} Sehr interessant! I think JCB would be horrified at the Prot part (though he was in many ways other than religious). He was responding to the Sapir-Whorf stuff of the early 50s (and back to the 20s) and took over their assumptions pretty directly (though not always correctly). One assumption was simply that there are a number of equally successful ways to describe the world which are incompatible with one another. This belief was based on the existence of non-SAE (standard average european) languages which differed from the familiar languages (even Chinese is pretty SAE on this basis) both in the way they describe the world and in the structure of the languages they use to make these descriptions (noun-only languages, verb- only, mixed cases, topic-modifier, subject-verb-object, and so on through not always very clear categories). Since all of these worked, no one of them was "the right way" to do it, and thus each inherent metaphysic (what was embedded in the langauge to give rise to a way of describing) had an equal claim to truth. Whorf, who for an insurance investigator was remarkably flakey, seems to have thought (not WASPish, really) that reality was totally beyond words and so all were equally wrong -- or almost. He thought that Hopi (his own langauge to study under Boas' guidance) was closest -- pure activity for a verb-only language. I think your characterization of Anglo Saxon, as opposed to Teutonic, thought is not totally unfair. Both come eventually to realize that reality is not knowable or, at least, not describable. The difference comes next. The AS says, so we will struggle along doing the best we can and correcting as we get better information. The Teuton says, so it must (or should) be this way and we will see to it that it is and stays that way. Pragmatists vs. Hegelians (and Nazis and other followers of Kant). |