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Science Daily reported today that the language one speaks can affect the way colors are percieved. Apparently, when common colors (that is, colors with specific names in a given language) are presented to a test subject, areas of the brain associated with word searching are activated much more than when the subject is presented with colors that are harder to name.
This is no surprise. Language is one of the most profound aspects of what it means to be human, and it only makes sense that differences in language should cause differences in perception.
One fascination of this study arises if its results are hypothetically extended to other areas of human experience. Consider, for example, time. Time has long been a mysterious subject of the inquiries of philosophers and scientists alike. But the concept of time is one that is central to language, in large part because of verbs.
I could go on for several paragraphs and describe different types of verb tenses. Be relieved – I’l spare you. Suffice to say that time is inextricably linked to language, and to grammatical tense. But if the results of the color study are extended (hypothetically) to time, it would mean that experience of time is not universal, but rather varies from language to language.
The really interesting implications arise through constructed languages. If I were to invent a language that handled time in a totally different way, then that could significantly change my experience of time. The philosophical implications could be enormous, especially if you subscribe to one of those schools of philosophy that links perception with reality.
Time travel anyone?



