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The evolution of language and socio-culture

Language is the most salient human attributive that co-evolved with culture. Without the innate ability to learn language it would have been impossible for our ancestors to communicate over ever larger social networks, or to solve complex problems in the ecological environment. The high level of differentiation of human language gives us the ability to convey complex information, and develop symbolic means of representation or what is called artefactual languages. The meaning of events around us and the natural world was symbolized on the walls of caves even in very early human cultures. Although other species communicate, they are not able to speculate about the intentions of others, but humans can not only convey their own intentions, but also attribute intentions to the behavior of others. These abilities form the foundations of human culture as informational and meaning systems that are passed from one generation to the next. Language is a universal hardwired attribute, but all cultures have developed their own variances and means of expressions. Examining the differences between languages helps us understand important components of cultural evolutionary history. Some communications are non-verbal and cultures impart meaning also to variances of non-verbal behavior.

How languages developed is important to our understanding of the role of culture. In the world of today cultures communicate not just within, but increasingly also between cultures. Since the lexical and grammatical content may be unique to each language, there are barriers to overcome when communicating between cultures. Although we live in the age of globalization unique language attributes will continue to influence language development and culture in the foreseeable future. Language gives humans the possibility to think, and unique features of each culture may canalize our thoughts in divergent directions. Understanding the impact of culturally directed thoughts is salient in our emerging new world.

5.1 The evolution of socioculture and language.

The co-evolution and reciprocal nature of socio-culture and languages are accepted by all socio-linguists. Darwinian evolution of genetic traits has also been utilized as a model in sociolinguistics and the important ideas of selective adaptation have proven useful in understanding the evolution of human culture and the languages by which it is communicated. The objective conditions considered essential by Darwin for genetic evolution to occur also exist in cultural evolution. Therefore phylogenetic models and associated mathematics are useful in both genetic and cultural evolution. As a result of evolutionary models describing human migration, demographics, and cultural history these processes are understood better today. However, the horizontal transmission of cultural traits unique to cultural evolution creates greater complexity not easily captured by phylogenetic methods since they were first developed to understand more lineal vertical genetic evolution. Nevertheless these methods have proven of great value to researchers trying to unravel our cultural descent. Forces of cultural stability affect evolutionary trends, although the forces of globalization require new thinking on the future of cultural and language evolution. In the multiplicity of thousands of human languages we have the modern support for the evolution of languages which after all was not caused by God at the Tower of Babel.

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