Poetics, Perception, Disinterestedness: An Online Notebook

Monday, April 28, 2008

The Stuff of Pinker

[video] Steven Pinker on I Want That! (2006): Mr Cube loves Smart Furniture.

Of thought and metaphor (January 2007): On Pinker's new book The Stuff of Thought: Language as a Window into Human Nature.

'Look at almost any passage and you'll find that a paragraph has five or six metaphors in it. It's not that the speaker is trying to be poetic, it's just that that's the way language works.

'Rather than occasionally reaching for a metaphor to communicate, to a very large extent communication is the use of metaphor.'


[old video] The Stuff of Thought (September 2007): Why don't we make grammatical sense when we swear?

[old science news] Holy @&%*! Author Steven Pinker Thinks We're Hardwired to Curse:

[He] takes a fresh look at the 'poo-poo theory', which proposes that swearing was actually the first form of language. He points to the fact that brain-damaged patients who lose the power of articulate speech often retain the ability to curse like a sailor. 'Since swearing involves clearly more ancient parts of the brain...it could be a missing link between animal vocalization and human language.'


What the F***? (October 2007) by Pinker:

The strange emotional power of swearing--as well as the presence of linguistic taboos in all cultures--suggests that taboo words tap into deep and ancient parts of the brain. In general, words have not just a denotation but a connotation: an emotional coloring distinct from what the word literally refers to, as in principled versus stubborn and slender versus scrawny. The difference between a taboo word and its genteel synonyms, such as shit and feces, cunt and vagina, or fucking and making love, is an extreme example of the distinction. Curses provoke a different response than their synonyms in part because connotations and denotations are stored in different parts of the brain.


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