Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Linguistics: Alpha and Omega

My interest in linguistics is beginning to swell. I have been glancing over the Wikipedia page on Phoenician, learning all sorts of valuable insights into the roots and subsequent growths of written language. For example, I did not know that both Greek and Cyrillic script (Russian alphabet) are both from Phoenician stock. From the Greek then came the Latin alphabet, which is the primary alphabet used in the Western Hemisphere (English, German, Romance languages). There are two things I noticed, while reading the article, that I feel are worth mentioning.

First, a personal insight that is founded solely on my own, mostly unimportant, coincidental connection between two texts:

The Wikipedia page lays out the Phoenician alphabet, along with its equivalents in Hebrew, Syriac, Arabic, South Arabic (which looks extremely different from the Arabic), Ge'ez (I don't know what this is, and it just gives a series of useless Unicode boxes for translation), Greek, Latin, and finally Cyrillic. Additionally, the table shows the Phoenician word that was associated with each letter. I found it fascinating to note that "ʾālep: ox" and "ʿayin: eye" were the Phoenician progenitors of the Greek derivatives "Alpha" and "Omega." In Revelation 22:13 it reads: "I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the first and the last." With some teaspoons of extrapolation and a fair dose of imagination, it may be seen that God is the Ox and the Eye, which are often seen as symbols for power and knowledge/wisdom. Therefore, the omnipotent attribute of God is seen in the meaning of Alpha/Ox (like an Alpha-male animal), while the omniscient attribute is described in the Omega/Eye.

Purely linguistic speculation, I found these connections due to my motivation, boredom, and my resources, memories of scriptures I had read. It was like a language-y Easter-egg hunt for me.

The second, more universal insight, and one that is founded in much more scholarly research, not to mention deductive common sense, is the following: Multiple languages have evolved from a common stock, a central stem. The thesis is a very basic one, but is intriguing to me nonetheless when it is compared to its cousins in the other fields of research.

When I picture a diagram of this fanning-out of language in my head, I picture a Darwinian tree of evolution. At the bottom there are the single-celled organisms. At the top there are millions of off-shoots, with a myriad of multi-cellular complexities. I imagine the organization and specialization of humanity to be made of much the same stuff. At the start of humanity, there was really just the one occupation: hunter-gatherer. As civilization began to aggregate, individuals devoted themselves towards a single area of expertise: farming grain, tanning animal hides, exchanging money. The same temporal dispersion holds true in chemistry. At the start of the universe there were only a few chemical elements, but as entropy took its course, more elements with more protons and neutrons formed. Finally, compounds began to form. Eventually, certain experts of those compounds made this computer I am typing at, allowing me to relay this message.

So the evolution of language partakes in the same model of evolution, the same model of child-bearing and multiplication. However, our globalization seems to be curbing, and perhaps even reversing that trend. Lots of languages seem to be dying out. Many smaller languages are becoming increasingly irrelevant, becoming either subsumed or entirely ignored by larger languages. I am not moralizing either way on whether or not this bodes well or ill for the future. Rather, for myself it is simply a very interesting shift in the evolution of language.

Perhaps in the future, instead of having a multiplication of languages, we will have a unification of languages into an end-all language of universal comprehension. The very term "language barrier" will be employed only in historical contexts. On the other hand, perhaps there will be a second Tower of Babel event. It may be that all of the languages will coalesce into such an easy and free parlance, that our civilization itself will not have the terminology to maintain itself; our laziness could send us spirally over the edge of linguistic equilibrium.

However, I think the more probable future would be one in which we hold onto the remnants of nearly-forgotten languages. The task is already being done, and it is being done entirely intentionally. The linguistic mutations of the past were sporadic and formed to serve the immediate purposes of their users. However, the linguistic evolution and maintenance of the future is and will be done with a deliberate hand and eye.

In addition, the old multiplication of language still continues, only in a different venue. The digital world, as well as the landscapes of science, architecture, and other growing fields, create neologisms constantly. Computer languages abound today, promising to grow in the future. It seems that, in the 21st century, they have burst forth like a sac of spider eggs. Their offspring have had plenty of software to cook up and commercialize.

Languages, despite dying out in some places, are being reborn in others. The possibilities for languages remain bright. In the classical condition of spoken and hand-written language that many traditional linguists relish, the drying up of many useless languages (curbed of course by intentional efforts of archiving them) seems inevitable. But the boundless capacity for all things to become reborn in something new and great? The new frontiers that are utilizing language itself is unprecedented ways? It is hard to believe that those concepts will ever die away; language will always revive itself in some new way.

Sunday, August 2, 2015

Golden Age Assured

Politics are pretty silly. We need policies to keep things in place. Politics occurs when people differ on policies. And the divisiveness, the harshness stems from that.

But what if there was no cause for this divisiveness? What if our problems were mostly solved? What if the USA had such a huge surplus, such huge technological breakthroughs and social/ethical breakthroughs, that we no longer needed all the political strife and tension that is resident in D.C. and the state capitols?

I don't really think of such a future in such an outlandish impossibility. When you think about it, on the whole, it doesn't seem that difficult.

I think the true obstacle is hatred and separation itself. Humans have long since conquered most environmental challenges with technology. At the dawn of homo sapiens, the odds were stacked against the average human. During periods where humans outlawed and annihilated useful technology, those same environmental dangers reemerged. The medieval era in Europe wiped out many lives because of this. Divisiveness and terror ruined the lives of thousands. It was entirely unnecessary-- completely preventable.

We have so many tools in our toolkit now to live longer lives, to sustain our education, and to live richer, more fulfilled lives. I see no reason why, with the right mindset, we can't see an almost stress-free existence in the coming decades. Our advances have increased at exponential rates: our medicine has developed quickly, our social connections have spread almost worldwide overnight, and our ease of knowledge is practically limitless due to an absolute surplus of electronic devices.

In the year 2040 or 2050, I don't see a place of fear, disillusionment, and total abject poverty. I don't see a single, authoritarian government leveling political enemies and stealing from its people.

On the contrary; I see a peaceful and entirely enterprising, free world. I see evolved Arab nations, where civilization beats back the vestiges of barbarism. I see much more tolerant and friendly relations between all races. I see religions coming together to explore their benefits, art, and love. I see an absolutely golden age of economic prosperity; instead of measuring our deficit, we will be at a loss of whom to give our surplus proceeds. Salaries will increase, work time will decrease. Intellectual freedom and strength will thrive, mistaken notions based upon ignorance will vanish. Struggles for power will lose their appeal, while struggles for healthy relationships and equal friendships will be constantly established and maintained.

In the novel Brave New World, this society is basically the case. I do not believe we will find this to be some fantastical, ridiculous dream; I think we will find it to be an unavoidable reality. Our children will know a sweeter, fresher, easier future.

And so, back to my original point. If things were near-perfect, if our problems were very easily solved and petty, I think politics would almost disappear. In a future like this, I would definitely run for the office of President. The campaign would be a blast, because it simply wouldn't be serious. I would have fun with it: play some guitar solos, have rap battles with my opponent, sit there and eat some popcorn on stage. My tone of levity in such an era would be a reflection of the radiant, hopeful light emanating from each liberated human soul.