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Fifty Percent of World's Languages Have Been Lost in Last Six Years

If you're as concerned as I am about the environment and how it impacts your health, chances are good you might've missed a huge cultural shift.

This absolutely fascinating video lecture by a very articulate Harvard anthropologist tells you how we are losing our heritage.

By Proferssor Davis' estimate, about half of the world's 6,000 languages are disappearing, as they are no longer being taught to children, meaning the origins of our world, ethnicity and spiritual life -- what he calls the enthnosphere -- are vanishing.

With language serving as "a watershed of thought" -- not just uncountable sets of grammatical rules keen to trip us up when we least expect it -- among various populations around the world, languages will die unless something happens soon to change it.

 


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Article's Comment     ( 18 Comments )
 
 
 +4 Points           
 
Author of the Article
BY Pat Ormsby   
  
[ Joined on 06/06 ]
[ Posted on March 28, 2007 ]
Post Reply
A language is a culture; a culture is an entire world. When you learn a new language, you understand this on a very deep level. Reach out to other, very different people wherever you can!
 

 +1 Points           
 
Author of the Article
BY healthstar   
  
[ Joined on 03/07 ]
Author of the Article [ Posted on April 12, 2007 ]
 
That's very sad, but it probably very true. My dad took pride in teaching me his native language, Latvian, and I would love it if my kids knew the language, but I have to choose between choosing Latvian and Spanish and I have to choose Spanish since it is used more often. My dad does teach them when he sees them but its only during the summertime, when he travels from Latvia to be with us for 2 months.

I hope people will once again take pride in their heritage again; it is so important!
Mirdza
Helping People Lead Healthier Lives

 +1 Points           
 
Author of the Article
BY Pat Ormsby   
  
[ Joined on 06/06 ]
Author of the Article [ Posted on April 12, 2007 ]
 
It seems that the more complicated our lives become, the more our language tends to become simplified to compensate. A lot is being lost in the name of efficiency. It would be hard to get textbooks for all 27 languages of Botswana, for example.

            
 
Author of the Article
BY Moruti   
  
[ Joined on 04/07 ]
Author of the Article [ Posted on April 12, 2007 ]
 
Of the 27 languages spoken in Botswana, only 2 are allowed to be used in school.  Many of the San and Khoe languages (Bushman) are slowly being lost.  Check www.reteng.org for more information.

 
 +1 Points           
 
Author of the Article
BY Russ Bianchi   
  
[ Joined on 09/06 ]
[ Posted on March 28, 2007 ]
Post Reply
Along with botanicals that are essential to life (somewhere in the neighborhood of 80+% of all medical preventative and reactive model treatments are based of these)  being lost forever, daily, by slash and burn short sightedness, this video is very illuminating as the racing geometric progression in LOSS to diversity in our cultures, be it language, and our strength as a species.  

We know what occurs when from a DNA standpoint when there is not diversity; it results in a weaker and less resistent disease base. 

COLLAPSE by Jared Diamond is worth a read on this subject, or set of subjects also.

 
            
 
Author of the Article
BY corgi   
  
[ Joined on 06/07 ]