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Language Is a Rock Against Which Evolutionary Theory Wrecks Itself
| 19 September 2016
As I've noted already,
Tom Wolfe has a new book, The
Kingdom of Speech, and it's superb. Wolfe's theme is that human language is unique
and is not shared in any way with other animals. He argues forcefully that
evolutionary stories about the origin of human language are not credible.
In the first chapter of his
book, Wolfe describes an article in journal Frontiers of Psychology from
2014, co-authored by leading linguist Noam Chomsky.
Wolfe:"The most fundamental questions about the origins and evolution of our linguistic capacity remain as mysterious as ever," [the authors] concluded. Not only that, they sounded ready to abandon all hope of ever finding the answer. Oh, we'll keep trying, they said gamely... but we'll have to start from zero again. One of the eight was the biggest name in the history of linguistics, Noam Chomsky. "In the last 40 years," he and the other seven were saying, "there has been an explosion of research on this problem," and all it had produced was a colossal waste of time by some of the greatest minds in academia....One hundred and fifty years since the Theory of Evolution was announced, and they had learned...nothing...In that same century and a half, Einstein discovered the speed of light and the relativity of speed, time and distance... Pasteur discovered that microorganisms, notably bacteria, cause an ungodly number of diseases, from head colds to anthrax and oxygen-tubed, collapsed-lung, final-stage pneumonia... Watson and Crick discovered DNA, the so-called building blocks genes are made of ...and 150 years' worth of linguists, biologists, anthropologists, and people from every other discipline discovered... nothing...about language. What is the problem? What's the story?...What is it that they still don't get after a veritable eternity?
Wolfe provides a précis of his
argument:
Speech is not one of man's several unique
attributes -- speech is the attribute of all attributes!
And yet, as Wolfe points out,
Darwinists are at an utter loss to explain how language -- the salient
characteristic of man -- "evolved." None of the deep drawer of
evolutionary just-so stories come anywhere close to explaining how man might
have acquired the astonishing ability to craft unlimited propositions and
concepts and subtleties within subtleties using a system of grammar and
abstract designators (i.e. words) that are utterly lacking anywhere else in the
animal kingdom.
Darwin and his progeny have had
no dearth of fanciful guesses -- birdsongs (Darwin's favorite theory) and
grunts and grimaces that mutate (survivors survive!) into Cicero and
Shakespeare. Evolutionary theorizing about language has been a colossal waste
of time. None of this evolutionary fancifulness makes any sense, nor has any
real scientific basis, and these "theories" are published almost
sheepishly, as if their authors tacitly acknowledge the fecklessness of
Darwinian mechanism in the face of such a gift as language.
I have argued
before that the human mind is qualitatively different from the animal mind. The
human mind has immaterial abilities -- the intellect's ability to grasp
abstract universal concepts divorced from any particular thing -- and that this
ability makes us more different from apes than apes are from viruses. We are ontologically different. We are a different kind of being from animals. We
are not just animals who talk. Although we share much in our bodies with
animals, our language -- a simulacrum of our abstract minds -- has no root in
the animal world.
Language is the tool by which we think abstractly. It is sui
generis. It is a gift, a window into the human soul, something we are made
with, and it did not evolve. Language is a rock against which evolutionary
theory wrecks, one of the many rocks -- the
uncooperative fossil record, the jumbled molecular evolutionary tree,
irreducible complexity, intricate intracellular design, the genetic code, the
collapsing myth of junk DNA, the immaterial human mind -- that comprise the
shoal that is sinking Darwin's Victorian fable.
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