Poll: Does being multilingual help you understand the human condition any better? Thread poster: ProZ.com Staff
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This forum topic is for the discussion of the poll question "Does being multilingual help you understand the human condition any better?".
This poll was originally submitted by ryancolm
View the poll here
A forum topic will appear each time a new poll is... See more This forum topic is for the discussion of the poll question "Does being multilingual help you understand the human condition any better?".
This poll was originally submitted by ryancolm
View the poll here
A forum topic will appear each time a new poll is run. For more information, see: http://proz.com/topic/33629 ▲ Collapse | | | Caro Maucher Germany Local time: 05:02 Member (2005) English to German + ... Wonderful question | Aug 30, 2009 |
I believe every time we stumble into the situation of wanting to express something that we know can be expressed perfectly in another language, but not in the one we need at that moment, we get a little bit closer to an understanding of pure meaning, of the truth behind all words. I guess that is the realm of the 'human condition'.
The more languages we know, the more we can express in one or the other of them, the more thoughts we can think, and the better we can understand people.... See more I believe every time we stumble into the situation of wanting to express something that we know can be expressed perfectly in another language, but not in the one we need at that moment, we get a little bit closer to an understanding of pure meaning, of the truth behind all words. I guess that is the realm of the 'human condition'.
The more languages we know, the more we can express in one or the other of them, the more thoughts we can think, and the better we can understand people. I wonder if we were able to speak all languages there are (or ever have been), would we be able to express everything?
(I reckon probably not...) ▲ Collapse | | | Latin_Hellas (X) United States Local time: 05:02 Italian to English + ... More perspectives | Aug 30, 2009 |
Perhaps understanding the human condition is like the blind men touching the elephant.
Different people and different cultures, both contemporary and across time, have both common and unique ways of understanding and expressing the human condition, and language is a tool of such expression; being multilingual, both ancient and modern, can help in understanding the human condition because it provides more perspectives on both common and unique ways of tackling this age-old question. ... See more Perhaps understanding the human condition is like the blind men touching the elephant.
Different people and different cultures, both contemporary and across time, have both common and unique ways of understanding and expressing the human condition, and language is a tool of such expression; being multilingual, both ancient and modern, can help in understanding the human condition because it provides more perspectives on both common and unique ways of tackling this age-old question.
[Edited at 2009-08-30 12:25 GMT] ▲ Collapse | |
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Excuse my ignorance but... | Aug 30, 2009 |
... I do not understand what "human condition" means in this context. | | | Jenn Mercer United States Local time: 23:02 Member (2009) French to English What a delightful question for a Sunday | Aug 30, 2009 |
I will say yes, although I think that the strongest effect has come from studying more than just my first 2-3 languages. Finding words that were similar in English and Spanish could be seen as just a coincidence. And of course, when Spanish and French proved to be fairly similar, there was no big surprise.
The real enlightenment came when I started to study Irish. I am barely even a beginner in this language, but I can tell you that it sounds like no other language that I have stud... See more I will say yes, although I think that the strongest effect has come from studying more than just my first 2-3 languages. Finding words that were similar in English and Spanish could be seen as just a coincidence. And of course, when Spanish and French proved to be fairly similar, there was no big surprise.
The real enlightenment came when I started to study Irish. I am barely even a beginner in this language, but I can tell you that it sounds like no other language that I have studied - so when one word comes out clearly from hundreds of other words, I get shivers. It has inspired me to learn more and made me think of what language I might study after Irish. ▲ Collapse | | | Yes, definitely | Aug 30, 2009 |
Though I wouldn't it is a universal effect. As with travel, where some people can travel around the world seven times and return home totally unchanged, the same with every opportunity that life affords it.
But Spanish gave me access to Mexican cultures that has so much in common and so many differences with the culture I grew up in that I have had to question values that, until then, had seemed self-evident, particularly in respect of family and community life. | | | Travel + knowing languages | Sep 5, 2009 |
Lesley Clarke wrote:
Though I wouldn't it is a universal effect. As with travel, where some people can travel around the world seven times and return home totally unchanged, the same with every opportunity that life affords it.
It's a good point, Lesley, but - isn't the reason that these people weren't changed by their travel precisely because they did not speak the languages of countries they visited? Can it be that visiting a country whose language you don't understand is indeed like a blind man touching an elephant?
But how enriching it would be to visit many different countries - and at least to some degree understand their languages... This would definitely open your eyes and your soul. | |
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Muriel Vasconcellos (X) United States Local time: 20:02 Spanish to English + ...
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