If Corballis had known a bit more about articulatory phonology and
mirror neurons at the time he produced this, this would have been
quite brilliant. It's still very good though. He based an entire book
on the argument. With more revelations from articulatory phonology
(mostly at Haskins Laboratory, Yale U.) and mirror neurons (mostly
coming from Italy), his book dated quickly.


CJ
http://confs.infres.enst.fr//evolang/actes/_actes14.html

Did language evolve
from manual gestures?
Michael C. Corballis

University of Auckland

abstract

True language appears to be unique to humans. This has created severe
problems in understanding how it evolved, since there is little that
can be learned about its evolution from the communications of other
species. Attempts at explanation have therefore depended more on
speculation than on fact, prompting the Linguistic Society of Paris,
as early as 1866, to ban all discussion of the language origins.
Moreover, given that spoken language is based on abstract symbols
(words), it is not clear how it began: How was it decided which
symbols would stand for which concepts, and how was this propagated?
As Rousseau remarked, "Words would seem to have been necessary to
establish the use of words." I shall argue that this apparent paradox
can be at least partially resolved if it is supposed that language
evolved from manual gestures, since gestures have at least the
potential to represent concepts iconically rather than in abstract
form. Once a set of iconic representations is established, increasing
usage can then lead to more stylized and ultimately abstract
representation, as has occurred in the evolution of writing systems.

Manual and bodily gestures play a prominent part in contemporary
language. The work of David McNeill and his colleagues at the
University of Chicago have documented the role of gestures in
present-day spoken language, and shown that gestures take on syntactic
structure if people are prevented from speaking. A number of
societies, notably certain groups of aboriginal people in Australia
and the United States, have developed sign languages that can function
in the absence of speech. The most accessible sign languages, however,
are those invented by deaf communities, and these are clear examples
of purely gestural language that have all of the important hallmarks
of true language, including fully developed syntax. Children learning
sign language from infancy go through essentially the same
developmental stages as those learning to speak, and sign language
also appears to be predominantly left-hemispheric.

Primates, including ourselves, are predominantly visual creatures,
with excellent voluntary control over the muscles of the limbs, while
in nonhuman primates control over vocalization is relatively poor and
is largely emotional rather than voluntary. The vocal and auditory
systems system in primates are better adapted to an arousing or
alerting function than to a descriptive or narrative one. Where the
intent is to convey information about a four-dimensional world of
space and time, as is the case in human language, the early hominids
were surely better preadapted to use gestures, which permit
four-dimensional representation, rather than vocalization, which is
essentially restricted to the single dimension of time. As evidence
for this, there has been at least some measure of success in teaching
a form of sign language to chimpanzees and gorillas, whereas attempts
to teach them to speak have been fruitless. Moreover, it has recently
been discovered that there are neurons in the prefrontal cortex of
macaques that respond both when the animal makes a specific grasping
movement, and when it observes the same grasping movement made by
others. These so-called "mirror neurons", it has been suggested, may
represent a precursor to a gestural language. They may also relate to
an ability to take the mental perspective of others, which can be
regarded as a necessary precursor to language.

The hominids split from the precursor of the modern chimpanzee about
five million years ago. The main characteristic distinguishing the
hominids was bipedalism, whereas the common ancestor was presumably a
quadrupedal knuckle walker, as are present-day chimps and gorillas.
Bipedalism freed the hands and arms from any major role in locomotion,
and created a more frontal stance, both of which would have boosted a
gestural, visual form of communication. It is conceivable that
gestural communication was a factor in the selection of the bipedal
stance, and not simply a fortuitous consequence of it. These early
hominids lived on the savanna-like territory, mostly to the east of
the Great Rift Valley in Africa, and an effective, silent form of
communication may have been crucial to survival in a habitat populated
by dangerous killers, such as the precursors to modern tigers, lions,
and hyenas.

About two million years ago, at least one branch of hominids, now
called hominins, began to show new characteristics. These included
increased brain size, the emergence of manufactured stone tools, and
the beginnings of migrations from Africa into Asia and Central Europe.
I shall argue that these developments may have heralded the emergence
of a more sophisticated language, still probably mainly gestural, but
including a recursive syntax that enabled communication to be
generative. It is likely that vocalizations increasingly accompanied
gestures, which might explain why cerebral asymmetry links handedness
with left-hemispheric control of vocalization.

Recent evidence suggests that modern-day humans evolved from an
African branch of hominins some 100-150,000 years ago. This new
species, Homo sapiens, also migrated out of Africa, beginning perhaps
70,000 years ago, and eventually replaced all other hominids,
including the Neanderthals in Europe and Homo erectus in Java and
Southern Asia. What explains the dominance of H. sapiens over equally
large-brained hominids like the Neanderthals? I suggest that it was
the conversion from a form that was dependent on gestures to one that
could function entirely vocally. It presumably took place before H.
sapiens migrated from Africa, since present-day humans speak, and it
is unlikely that autonomous speech arose independently in different
geographic locations. On the other hand, reconstructions of the vocal
tract have been interpreted to mean that the Neanderthals would have
been incapable of fluent speech. This suggests that the conversion to
autonomous speech took place, perhaps gradually, somewhere between
about 150,000 and 70,000 years ago. The conversion may have been quite
a small step, since vocalizations probably played an increasing role
throughout hominid evolution, but it was a crucial step because it
freed the hands from communication. This would have enhanced tool
manufacture, allowing people to explain techniques verbally while
demonstrating them. This may have heralded the beginning of pedagogy.
It would also have allowed communication at night, and when obstacles
prevent communicating parties from viewing each other. It also places
fewer demands on focal attention.

I suggest that the emergence of sophisticated tools, art,
ornamentation, and human culture can be attributed to the emergence of
a fully autonomous vocal language. There was a particularly dramatic
increase in the sophistication of human artifacts around 30-40,000
years ago, which is perhaps too late to be attributed directly to the
emergence of autonomous vocal language some 60-100,000 years earlier.
However, recent evidence suggests that this so-called "evolutionary
explosion" may have occurred much earlier in Africa, and earlier
migrations, such as that to Australia, must have required
sophisticated technology. I suggest that, with the switch to
vocalization, technology and social complexity progressed in
exponential fashion, and shows no signs of abating. One of the
consequence of the freeing of the hands was the development of new
visual forms of communication, including pictorial art, writing, and
ultimately photography, film, and computer graphics. So we come back
to ways of exploiting the visual sophistication that we inherited from
our primate forbears.

The idea that language evolved from manual gestures is not new. It was
suggested in 1746 by the philosopher Condillac, and was revived in the
1970s by the anthropologist Gordon W. Hewes. It received something of
a boost, notably from the linguist William Stokoe, when it was fully
understood that the sign languages of the deaf have all of the
essential hallmarks of true language, including generative syntax. A
number of linguists and anthropologists have supported the idea, but
on the whole it has not been widely accepted. For example, one of the
most popular and influential of recent books on language, Steven
Pinker�s The Language Instinct, essentially dismisses the idea,
despite the fact that it includes examples from sign language to
support ideas about the development and nature of language. I believe
the idea is now sufficiently compelling that it should be taken
seriously.

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