The Linguistic Relativity Hypothesis
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.52340/gbsab.2024.52.06Keywords:
Hypothesis, relativism, causation, variable, implausibly, cognitionAbstract
The suggestion that different languages carve the world up in different ways, and that as a result their speakers think about it differently has a certain appeal. But questions about the extent and kind of impact that language has on thought are empirical questions that can only be settled by empirical investigation. And although linguistic relativism is perhaps the most popular version of descriptive relativism, the conviction and passion of partisans on both sides of the issue far outrun the available evidence. As usual in discussions of relativism, it is important to resist all-or-none thinking. The key question is whether there are interesting and defensible versions of linguistic relativism between those that are trivially true.
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Alford, Dan Moon hawk, The Great Whorf Hypothesis Hoax, 2019
Swoyer, Chris (2015), "The Linguistic Relativity Hypothesis", Stanford Encyclopaedia of Philosophy Archive
Kay, Paul; Kempton, Willet (1984), "What is the Sapir–Whorf Hypothesis?", American Anthropologist.
Boroditsky, Lera; Segel, Edward (2011). "Grammar in Art".
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