Wednesday, July 22, 2009

on miracles and such: the miracle of language

The truth is, the mere fact that I am standing here writing this blog post (I have a "standing" desk, in case you're wondering; just imagine me standing at a bar) is a miracle. My existence is a miracle. Your existence is a miracle. My consciousness is a miracle; the fact that I am able to write this blog post is a miracle. Your consciousness is a miracle; the fact that you are able to read this blog is a miracle.

Language is a miracle.

Christine Kenneally, author of the book "The First word: the Search for the Origins of Language," essentially states that nobody really knows how humans initiated language; it's a complete mystery to this day; she call it science's greatest mystery of modern times.

Actually, I don't think it's mysterious; I think it's a God-given innate ability that all humans have - yes, miraculous. She positioned language as this "virtual world" that we inhabit, that's different than the physical world we inhabit. And it's amazing how just "words" have the power to both wound and comfort so profoundly.

Karen Armstrong, in her biography on the Bible, states it this way:

"Human beings are meaning-seeking creatures. Unless we find some pattern or significance in our lives, we fall very easily into despair. Language plays an important part in our quest. It is not only a vital means of communication, but it helps us to articulate and clarify the incoherent turbulence of our inner world. We use words when we want to make something happen outside ourselves: we give an order or make a request and, one way or another, everything around us changes, however infinitesimally. But when we speak we also get something back: simply putting an idea into words can give it a luster and appeal that it did not have before. Language is mysterious. When a word is spoken, the ethereal is made flesh; speech requires incarnation - respiration, muscle control, tongue and teeth. Language is a complex code, ruled by deep laws that combine to form a coherent system that is imperceptible to the speaker, unless he or she is a trained linguist. But language has an inherent inadequacy. There is always something left unsaid; something that remains inexpressible. Our speech makes us conscious of the transcendence that characterizes human experience."

Brilliant.


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