Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5124538 Language Sciences 2017 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Language origin is tied to traits that make human communication specific.•The specific feature of language is its inherently narrative character.•The narrative nature of language depends on global coherence.•Mental Time Travel is the system that processes global coherence.•Mental Time Travel allowed the origin of language in the form storytelling.

In this paper we propose a narrative account for the origin of language. Such a proposal is based on two assumptions. The first is conceptual and concerns the idea that the distinctive feature of human language (what sets it apart from other forms of animal communication) has to be traced to its inherently narrative character. The second assumption is methodological and connected to the idea that the study of language origin is closely related to the analysis of the cognitive systems at the base of narrative. Research on narrative abilities of subjects with Autism Spectrum Disorder has shown that storytelling requires the capability to link events causally connected to one another, and especially events which are remote from one another on the temporal axis of a story. Based on this research, we hypothesize that an important cognitive device involved in narrative is Mental Time Travel (MTT), that is, the system that allows humans to project themselves into the past and future. We show that such a system is present (to a greater or lesser extent) even in non-human animals. By virtue of this, we argue that MTT is independent of language and that it may be considered a cognitive precursor for the origin of language. Specifically, we propose that MTT allowed our ancestors to develop a form of pantomimic communication that might be considered as the foundation of the narrative origin of language.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities Language and Linguistics
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