Philosophy Linguistics

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A paper onIndian philosophy of language

Transcript of Philosophy Linguistics

Page 1: Philosophy Linguistics

INDIAN PHILOSOPHY AND MODERN LINGUISTICSIndian philosophy has some opinion on some

features of language and the same share some close resemblance with the views of modern linguistics. Indians have a long tradition of language analysis and study commencing from prati¿¡khyas. The phonetics, etymology and grammar were studied deeply in ancient and medieval India. A limitation of these studies is that all of them are on Sanskrit languge and no universal theory about language and language phenomenon absent. This particular aspect was attended by philosophers. All systems of thought said their views on the functioning of language and the acquisition of language.

Before entering into a discussion on the topic one should not that the approach and method that a philosopher and linguist follow in the analysis of language is different. As philosophy being the study of reality a philosopher is always preoccupied with the metaphysics, epistemology and ontology of the system. His attempts were to describe and prove how the real can be known? As among many means to learn about, understand and experience the real language also included. In Indian

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context it was termed as ¿abda and ¿¡bdajµ¡na. Opponents put these concepts for severe scrutiny and we have many theories about ‘language phenomenon’. These ideas have a universal characteristic were not limited to Sanskrit language. There are many but here this paper considers just two of them language acquisition and the relation between word and object. The first topic though it was discussed from time Greek philosophy, become rose to hot topic of debate after the intervention of Chomsky and his ideas of ‘universal grammar’ and ‘competence and performance’. The second topic is a comprehensive topic as it tries to explain the language as a whole. It is connected with Saussure who described language as system of systems and explained how various parts of language and individuals in the society are connected.

Language acquisition according to Indian philosophers

When, where the language originated? Vaidikas identified it with ‘v¡k’. They associated magical powers with language which resulted in the deification of language and few Gods V¡k, brahma¸aspati etc were placed as the authority of language.1 Da¸·i’s salutation to

1 Ṛgveda 10.125

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language clarifies this position. Generally Indians accepted it as ‘apauruÀeya’ and beginning less. But how a human being acquires his language? They described it through an example – quoting the words of Kunjunni Raja-

“Hearing the utterance of a sentence by A to B and observing the consequent activity on the part of listener B, an onlooker C gets the idea that the activity of B is based on his understanding the meaning of the sentence. At this time the whole action of B is understood as the meaning of the whole utterance of A. From several such observations of various utterances and their meanings, C is able to understand the meaning of single words through a process of assimilation and elimination”2.

This shows that a person learns his first language from his society. He learns the conventions of that particular language – vocabulary, rules and the contextual usages gradually from the members of his society. This description is accepted by all the ancient

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philosophers. But at the same time they have differences about ‘what learns from the process’.

As in the case of many Indian sciences our ‘linguist philosopher’ stops a step behind. As pointed earlier the philosophers mind took them away or distracts them away from the natural genuine question – how this happens. The linguist Chomsky starting from this point has concluded – based only on reasoning and speculation – that every infant baby (fault less) has the ability to internalise language, which he called LAD- Language acquisition Device. The brain of the child is programmed, as a computer programme to execute certain tasks, to acquire language. To Chomsky this programme residing in the brain of child is ‘Universal Grammar’ and the ability of the child as ‘competence’. He receives the language and the conventions of the language community with the aid of the LAD.

Here we should remember that Indian philosophers were very close to this idea. The definition of ‘b¡laka’ is श्रवणधारणापटुः।. They also agree that the child uses his ability of reasoning to learn vocabulary, the relation between word and object, the contextual connotations etc. The

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reason that prevented Indian thinkers from reaching to this conclusion was their adherence to metaphysics.

The relation between word and objectThe second topic that Indian philosophy and modern

linguistics share some similarities is the discussion about the relation between word and its meaning. Here too the approach of Indian thinkers is not of linguists. The view of each philosopher is conditioned by their philosophical position. In philosophy we have many schemes such as materialism, idealism etc. Indian philosophers too have such orientations.

Generally language is a means of communication. It communicates concrete objects and abstract ideas. That is the stock of vocabulary comprises words that have concrete objects as their substratum and ideas that are mental constructs. Modern linguists were prepared to accept the situation as it is. But the philosopher tried to explain according to their system. For example yoga philosophy which consider knowledge as the transformation of mind. Consider the definition of vikalpa –

शब्दज्ञानानुपाती वस्तुशून्यो विवकल्पः – when there is no object corresponding to a word it is called vikalpa and such knowledge have no validity. At the same time the word have its role in language and its use is granted by grammar. That is the correspondence theory of the philosopher is not compatible with language phenomenon that language can build a world with its infinite images, where it departs from the realism of philosopher.

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The philosopher is concerned with the exact knowledge of the object with mathematical precision. But language flees from there. The Indian philosopher’s emphasis was on how the word and object related? They give many answers, 1. The relation is natural and permanent, 2. It is conventional, 3. There are both conventional as well as permanent relations. They agree that word have a meaning which is called its potency but they disagree on whether this potency rests in the actual object or in the abstract concept.

Saussure considered these aspects in detail and illustrated the complex relation of various factors of language. He says that language have two vital components langue and parole. Langue is the property of the language community, the vocabulary, rules and conventions shared by all the members of the community in which the individual have no absolute control. Parole is the individual’s actual use of langue in his life. Parole is infinite while langue is finite. He sums up his observations in his words ‘language is a system of systems’.

According to him langue is a ‘sign’ system. Each word is a sign of some object or concept that the community has agreed on. And this sign – concept/ object agreement is arbitrary as another language community can use a different sign for the same concept / object.

Here too the philosopher failed to rise up to the mark. They were successful in analysing the problem. They had the answers –

the best ones. But they could not provide a conclusive theory.

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Here the contribution of naiy¡yikas cannot be neglected. They were true linguists in their spirit. From sutras to their latest works they modified and adjusted their definitions and approaches. Yet their adherence to metaphysics and realist epistemology restricted them from producing a comprehensive universal theory applicable to all languages. Still their ideas are very close to that of Saussure.

To conclude, though Indian philosophers successfully analysed the ‘phenomenon language’, and the ‘conditions that control language’ they could not formulate a comprehensive theory of language that universally applicable. They stopped just a step behind as in the case of mathematics and other sciences. The reason is their overwhelming adherence to metaphysics and its epistemology. The grammarians perfectly analysed Sanskrit language. The pattern was accepted all over the world and even Chomsky accepted P¡¸ini’s grammar as perfect grammar. But some unknown reasons restricted its further development to ‘General Linguistics’.