Philosophy of Language (PHIL 145.001/LING 145.001)
Instructor: Dorit Bar-On. This class meets on Mondays and Wednesdays from 10:00 – 11:15 a.m. in Caldwell 105.
Language has often been claimed to be the “Rubicon” that no animal could ever cross – that which separates humans from all non-human animals. In this course, we will explore questions such as: What is unique about human linguistic communication? How is it different from bee dances, bird songs, dolphin and whale whistles, apes’ gestures, and animal alarm calls? If there are important differences, what do they tell us about the nature of the human mind, and about the place of humans in nature? In the course of exploring these questions, we will be looking at analyses of linguistic communication offered by linguists, psychologists, biologists, and philosophers, as well as at exciting recent findings about animal communication systems that have been alleged to challenge the “Rubicon” claim.
The course will have three parts:
1. What is special about human language? (Philosophy of Language and Linguistics)
2. What are animal communication systems like? (Ethology)
3. How could language evolve from animal communication? (Language Evolution)
Dorit Bar-On’s webpage