Cognitive Linguistics Support for the Evolution of Language from Animal Cognition
Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper › peer-review
Electronic versions
Links
- https://escholarship.org/uc/item/46s8778g
Final published version
This paper explores previous arguments that language evolved not from animal communication, as naturally assumed by most scholars, but instead out of animal cognition. It is proposed here that additional support for this argument comes from Cognitive Linguistics, an interdisciplinary branch of linguistics. Cognitive Linguistics mediates communication and cognition but, as with Cognitive Discourse Analysis, studies language use in terms of what it demonstrates about underlying cognitive processes and concepts. The paper demonstrates key examples of animal cognition’s links to language, with Cognitive Linguistics support, as well as the approach’s application to animal cognition in terms of domain-general symbolism, beyond verbal language. However, because communication remains a major function of language, the communicative aspect ought to be maintained in the explanation of language evolution.
Keywords
- Animal Cognition, Animal Communication, Cognitive Linguistics, Language Evolution, Symbols, LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS
Original language | English |
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Publication status | Published - Jul 2021 |
Event | CogSci2021: The Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society - Austria / Online Duration: 26 Jul 2021 → 29 Jul 2021 |
Conference
Conference | CogSci2021 |
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Period | 26/07/21 → 29/07/21 |