Over the past two decades, studies of the phylogenetic emergence of language have typically focused on grammatical characteristics, especially those that distinguish modern languages from animal communication. The relevant literature has thus left the reader with the impression that language is either exclusively or primarily mental; in the latter case, its physical features, phonetic or manual, would be epiphenomena that may be overlooked. I argue that language is natural collective technology that evolved primarily to facilitate efficient communication in populations whose social structures were becoming increasingly more complex. It emerged through hominines’ exaptation of their own anatomy, thanks to the same mind that was enabling the complex cultures they were producing. Linguistic constraints of various kinds are emergent properties that are largely consequences of the modalities used, a position that does not expect signed languages cum legitimate linguistic systems to replicate the general architecture of spoken languages in all respects. The rest of the paper speculates on how the architecture of spoken languages evolved, gradually, with some features presupposing the prior emergence of others, whereas some others conjure up concurrent emergence. The facts suggest a complex non-unilinear evolutionary trajectory with many alternative options, consistent with emergent technologies in which considerations of optimality are absent.
2022. The verticalization model of language shift from a historical sociolinguistic perspective. In The Verticalization Model of Language Shift, ► pp. 195 ff.
Benanti, Paolo
2023. The urgency of an algorethics. Discover Artificial Intelligence 3:1
Bousquette, Joshua
2022. The Great Change in Midwestern agriculture. In The Verticalization Model of Language Shift, ► pp. 52 ff.
Bousquette, Joshua, Joshua R. Brown, Benjamin Frey, Mirva Johnson, David Natvig & Joseph Salmons
2022. Reflecting on the commentaries. In The Verticalization Model of Language Shift, ► pp. 215 ff.
Joshua R. Brown
2022. The Verticalization Model of Language Shift,
Brown, Joshua R.
2022. Language shift and religious change inCentralPennsylvania. In The Verticalization Model of Language Shift, ► pp. 114 ff.
Brown, Joshua R. & Joseph Salmons
2022. A verticalization theory of language shift. In The Verticalization Model of Language Shift, ► pp. 1 ff.
de Boer, Bart
2017. Complexity in Speech: Teasing Apart Culture and Cognition. In Complexity in Language, ► pp. 48 ff.
Ding, Seong Lin & Wei Han Chee
2023. “What I want to do I do not do”: on bi- and multilingual repertoires and linguistic dislocation in a border town. Multilingua 42:3 ► pp. 315 ff.
Elias, John Z. & Shaun Gallagher
2014. Word as Object: A View of Language at Hand. Journal of Cognition and Culture 14:5 ► pp. 373 ff.
Frey, Benjamin E.
2022. Internal verticalization and community maintenance. In The Verticalization Model of Language Shift, ► pp. 139 ff.
Impett, Jonathan
2021. Music, discourse and intuitive technology. AI & SOCIETY
Johnson, Mirva
2022. Politics and cooperatives. In The Verticalization Model of Language Shift, ► pp. 25 ff.
2020. Genetic Creolistics as Part of Evolutionary Linguistics. In The Handbook of Historical Linguistics, ► pp. 393 ff.
Mufwene, Salikoko S.
2022. The verticalization model of language shift from a population-structure perspective. In The Verticalization Model of Language Shift, ► pp. 166 ff.
Mufwene, Salikoko S., Christophe Coupé & François Pellegrino
2017. Complexity in Language: A Multifaceted Phenomenon. In Complexity in Language, ► pp. 1 ff.
2022. The Great Change and the shift from Norwegian to English in Ulen, Minnesota. In The Verticalization Model of Language Shift, ► pp. 85 ff.
Pirhonen, Antti & Rebekah Rousi
2018. Educational Technology Goes Mobile. International Journal of Mobile Human Computer Interaction 10:2 ► pp. 65 ff.
Pirhonen, Antti & Rebekah Rousi
2020. Educational Technology Goes Mobile. In Mobile Devices in Education, ► pp. 171 ff.
Schlaudt, Oliver
2022. Exaptation in the Co-evolution of Technology and Mind: New Perspectives from Some Old Literature. Philosophy & Technology 35:2
[no author supplied]
2022. List of Tables. In The Verticalization Model of Language Shift, ► pp. ix ff.
[no author supplied]
2022. Copyright Page. In The Verticalization Model of Language Shift, ► pp. iv ff.
[no author supplied]
2022. List of Figures. In The Verticalization Model of Language Shift, ► pp. viii ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 5 may 2023. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.