Language Log on the Whorfian hypothesis
Written on February 26, 2008
An interesting post at the Language Log on the Whorfian hypothesis: “Poor, arid, and, in appearance, deformed”
At least in lexicographic terms, the Indo-European languages do not, contrary to what Whorf says, share a linguistic history that predisposes their speakers unconsciously to a particular physics of time, distance, velocity and so on. In particular, the English words for those abstract physical concepts developed rather late, mostly as part of a conscious effort to import or develop explicit physical theories. And the terms used were figurative or metaphorical extensions of much juicier and more concrete words for things like “strength” and “discord” and “being alive”.
Filed in: culture.