A lot of other animals besides humans use vocalisations, and those vocalisations can have quite specific meanings. This makes them a form of communication and demonstrates that encoding meaning in sound is a phenomenon that develops quite readily in nature.
We can also see then that the history of language in humans is those vocalisations becoming increasingly complex and able to represent more numerous concepts and thoughts until they eventually become something we recognise as a full language.
Written language is a mechanism to encode spoken language, but it’s spoken language which came first.
Now you’ve got me thinking.
Did language evolve from writing, or did writing evolve from language?
Writing from language.
A lot of other animals besides humans use vocalisations, and those vocalisations can have quite specific meanings. This makes them a form of communication and demonstrates that encoding meaning in sound is a phenomenon that develops quite readily in nature.
We can also see then that the history of language in humans is those vocalisations becoming increasingly complex and able to represent more numerous concepts and thoughts until they eventually become something we recognise as a full language.
Written language is a mechanism to encode spoken language, but it’s spoken language which came first.
guess where the word “prehistoric” comes from ;)
also, non-human animals have language without writing.