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105 Given, new and the selfless know-it-all

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Manage episode 463956258 series 2964320
Content provided by Jodie Clark. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Jodie Clark or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

What if you could know everything, but you had to lose your self in the process? We discuss two layered structures in human languages. The first is word order, such as Subject-Verb-Object (SVO) and Subject-Object-Verb (SOV). The second is information structure, which is the system by which people in interaction navigate their interlocutor’s knowledge state, orienting what they say to make a distinction between given and new information. All human languages start from the assumption that human beings in interaction know different things, or are putting their attention to different things.

In this episode we play with the idea that individual minds, with different states of knowledge, didn’t precede, but are produced by language. We pose the hypothesis that human language shapes the experience of selfhood—which therefore restricts our capacity to know everything.

We also talk about Ted Chiang’s brilliant novella, The story of your life. But if you want to know what will happen in the future, you’re out of luck, because the future is a projection of the self, moving in a linear way through time.

What are your thoughts about the ideas discussed in this episode? Because I have a self, I can’t know until you tell me.

The story I read in this episode is ‘The dark art of world-building.’

Sign up for the Grammar for Dreamers newsletter here: jodieclark.com/newsletter

Subscribe on Apple podcasts, Spotify or wherever you like to listen. Rate, review, tell your friends!

  continue reading

112 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 463956258 series 2964320
Content provided by Jodie Clark. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Jodie Clark or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

What if you could know everything, but you had to lose your self in the process? We discuss two layered structures in human languages. The first is word order, such as Subject-Verb-Object (SVO) and Subject-Object-Verb (SOV). The second is information structure, which is the system by which people in interaction navigate their interlocutor’s knowledge state, orienting what they say to make a distinction between given and new information. All human languages start from the assumption that human beings in interaction know different things, or are putting their attention to different things.

In this episode we play with the idea that individual minds, with different states of knowledge, didn’t precede, but are produced by language. We pose the hypothesis that human language shapes the experience of selfhood—which therefore restricts our capacity to know everything.

We also talk about Ted Chiang’s brilliant novella, The story of your life. But if you want to know what will happen in the future, you’re out of luck, because the future is a projection of the self, moving in a linear way through time.

What are your thoughts about the ideas discussed in this episode? Because I have a self, I can’t know until you tell me.

The story I read in this episode is ‘The dark art of world-building.’

Sign up for the Grammar for Dreamers newsletter here: jodieclark.com/newsletter

Subscribe on Apple podcasts, Spotify or wherever you like to listen. Rate, review, tell your friends!

  continue reading

112 episodes

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