David Peterson: Why language is humanity's greatest invention
David Peterson creates languages for television shows, for films and for fun. Full bio
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have in common,
that I took in the last three months,
with the benefit of language.
would have existed without language.
an entire building like this,
that was got by the use of language.
is the most important thing
their lives to studying it --
how human languages differ,
animal communication systems --
young field, more or less.
of really important stuff.
communication systems
communication systems,
who just love to pop off about language
understanding of it as a linguist,
that means you have just as much right
as anybody else.
about aortic valve replacements.
is just as valid as yours."
saying that in the film "Arrival,"
in a language they already know --
in talking to somebody
is not off the hook.
listen, film. Hey, buddy:
to our planet in gigantic ships,
except for communicate with us,
on a budget or something?
chalked up to misunderstandings,
and about the formal study of language,
underlies a lot of these misunderstandings
by this delightful article in "Forbes,"
shouldn't learn foreign languages.
some quotes from this,
if you can figure out
of these opinions and ideas.
even in translation."
learning a foreign language
the classic in the original anyway?
is a waste of time,
that you could be doing in school."
clustered in a relatively small space."
of learning another language?
a lot of bang for your buck out of that.
would have to travel
to get to the Mexican border,
people who speak English to get around."
kind of wave your arms around,
in learning another language anyway.
is the conceptual metaphor,
very true about this metaphor.
you can do more than if you didn't.
language is only a tool,
it would honestly be a pretty poor tool.
for something that was a lot better.
in my life: "Yesterday I saw Kyn."
"Yesterday I saw Kyn,"
is now implanted in your mind
of other stuff going on.
was like yesterday because I was there.
I forgot to mail, which I did.
but I really did forget to mail something.
I'm going to have to do it Monday,
I'm going to get back home.
by the Bangles. It's a good song.
I think of this phrase:
as he picked up his hammer and saw."
I always think of that,
always used to say it,
again, for some reason.
something like, "Yesterday I saw Kyn,"
under which I saw him.
Here he is with my cat.
Long Beach State right now,
my good friend John and my mother
Long Beach State right now.
of what's going on in your head
the entire mess
that our system is so poor?
what is it like to eat a cake,
the ingredients of a cake,
can be combined to form a cake.
the only way -- the only way --
what is going on here, in our minds.
from other animals,
is our own languages.
what's going on in our head.
a big question, like:
thought and emotion?"
as many different languages
with a lot fewer pixels.
of these pictures is a real cat.
of what a cat is than the other.
what it means to be human.
I mean all humans everywhere.
makes that picture a lot less clear.
some nonsuperficial connection
between those dots.
all bent out of shape
in James Cameron's "Avatar."
it took James Cameron
a language died."
where it used to be ..."
but the other one was English.
the study of English,
of the English language, as we know,
more broadly, is kind of like art;
entire beings and histories.
and just unique spirit
into these fictional beings.
take a look at this.
about fictional characters.
fictional, fake human being.
on George F. Babbitt
that book is longer than "Babbitt,"
it's better than "Main Street."
that literature is interesting.
in what created languages can tell us
just as an artistic endeavor.
magazine a while back.
from the opposing side,
seems like a weird thing to do.
from the opposing side of that person.
a puff piece, but whatever.
linguists of our time,
here at Berkeley.
the fields of linguistics
and about language creation in general,
to be done in the study of language.
on something real."
Does this remind you of anything?
that he himself invented,
to this conceptual metaphor:
under this conceptual metaphor;
when it can be used for communication.
when it can't be used for communication.
What do we do with dead languages?
the very height of absurdity
on the High Valyrian language
"Game of Thrones."
are 740,000 people learning?
the other language for this --
never use for communication
that's what it says.
some very fascinating things,
at the very end of a sentence.
when you have two arguments.
for the word "the" -- it's totally absent.
can actually be longer in duration,
they're actually the same length.
there are these little inflections.
on the end of nouns --
to whom in a sentence.
of the words the same
do things, the same things, differently.
for Language: capital "L" Language.
of Americans only speak English at home,
necessarily a bad thing.
one language on a smaller group,
of speakers is wiped out.
and it's happening now,
a child is born to a family
is not widely spoken in their community,
in their community.
if they speak that language.
as learning High Valyrian,
to a lot more linguistic fluency.
are studying more languages,
language for what it is --
in the history of humankind --
as living languages,
Thank you.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
David Peterson - Language creator, writer, artistDavid Peterson creates languages for television shows, for films and for fun.
Why you should listen
Best known for creating the Dothraki and Valyrian languages for HBO's Game of Thrones, David Peterson continues to work in Hollywood, though primarily out of his home in Orange County, where he lives with his wife, daughter and two cats. He's appeared previously on The Daily Show with Trevor Noah (2016) and given talks at Google (2014 and 2015) and EG (2016). He has written two books, Living Language Dothraki (2014) and The Art of Language Invention (2015), and some of his upcoming work includes Netflix's The Witcher and Legendary's Dune.
David Peterson | Speaker | TED.com