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196 results for "language rights" — page 2 of 10
ZG_4_19 — Language Extinction Crisis
The world is experiencing an unprecedented crisis of linguistic diversity — of the approximately 7,168 living languages cataloged by Ethnologue (25th edition, 2022), an estimated 43% (3,045 languages) are classified as e
ZG_4_17 — Linguistic Relativity Update: Language, Thought, and the Sapir-Whorf Renaissance
Linguistic relativity — the hypothesis that the language one speaks influences one's perception, categorization, and cognition — has undergone a dramatic scientific renaissance since the late 1990s, moving from a discred
ZG_4_18 — Whistled Languages: Long-Distance Communication Through Tonal Transposition
Whistled languages — systems in which speakers transpose the phonological content of a spoken language into whistled melodies, preserving sufficient linguistic structure to carry complex messages over distances of 2–8 km
ZG_4_16 — Language Death and Endangerment: Mechanisms, Metrics, and Revitalization
Of the world's approximately 7,000 living languages, linguists estimate that 50–90% will cease to be spoken by the end of the 21st century — a rate of extinction that dwarfs biological species loss. A language "dies" whe
ZG_4_02 — Sign Language — Gestural Communication and Deaf Culture
Sign languages are fully developed natural languages that use the visual-gestural modality — hands, face, body, and spatial relationships — instead of the auditory-vocal channel to express the same range of linguistic co
ZG_3_05 — Language and Thought: Cognitive Semantics
The relationship between language and thought — whether the language we speak shapes, constrains, or determines how we perceive, categorize, and reason about the world — is one of the oldest and most debated questions in
ZG_3_21 — Tone Languages & Cognition
Tone languages — languages in which the pitch pattern of a syllable determines or changes its lexical meaning — are spoken by more than half of the world's population, though they are frequently overlooked in linguistic
ZG_3_02 — FOXP2 and the Genetics of Language
FOXP2 (Forkhead Box Protein P2) is the first gene directly linked to human speech and language ability, located on chromosome 7q31 and encoding a transcription factor that regulates hundreds of downstream genes involved
ZG_3_16 — Sign Language Typology: Structure, Diversity, and the Linguistics of Gesture
Sign languages — natural human languages that use the visual-gestural modality rather than the vocal-auditory channel — are among the most powerful demonstrations that human linguistic capacity is not bound to speech. Th
ZG_3_01 — Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis — Does Language Shape Thought?
The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis — more precisely, the principle of linguistic relativity — proposes that the structure of a language influences or determines the habitual thought patterns, perception, and worldview of its spe
Language_DNA_Migration_Triangulation
The last two decades have witnessed a revolution in our understanding of human migration history, driven by the integration of computational linguistics, paleogenomics, and archaeology into a unified analytical framework
ZC_4_13 — Indigeneity and Indigenous Rights
Indigeneity and Indigenous rights address the political, legal, cultural, and territorial claims of peoples who identify as Indigenous — the original inhabitants of territories subsequently colonized by settlers, with di
T_3_08 — Psychology of Language and Bilingualism
Psycholinguistics — the study of psychological processes underlying language production, comprehension, and acquisition — spans one of the deepest questions in cognitive science: how do humans acquire, process, and use l
T_5_13 — Psycholinguistics: Language and Thought, Sapir-Whorf, and the Cognitive Science of Language
Psycholinguistics — the scientific study of the cognitive processes underlying language comprehension, production, and acquisition — investigates how the mind/brain processes the ~1 billion words a person hears, reads, s
ZD_2_12 — Generative AI: Large Language Models, Diffusion, and the Transformer Revolution
Generative AI refers to artificial intelligence systems capable of creating new content — text, images, audio, video, code, 3D models — that is novel, coherent, and often indistinguishable from human-created work. The fi
L_5_07 — Genetics of Speech and Language: Beyond FOXP2
Language is humanity's most distinctive cognitive ability — and identifying its genetic basis has been a central goal of human genetics and neuroscience since the discovery of the KE family and the FOXP2 gene. The KE fam
P_3_18 — Lacan Mirror Stage: Subjectivity, Language, and the Imaginary Order
Jacques Lacan (1901–1981), French psychoanalyst and psychiatrist, was the most original and controversial interpreter of Sigmund Freud's legacy in the 20th century. Lacan's central project was to "return to Freud" — to r
P_5_09 — Wittgenstein: Language Games, Tractatus, and Investigations
Ludwig Josef Johann Wittgenstein (1889-1951) is unique in the history of philosophy for having produced two profoundly influential but largely incompatible philosophical systems. His first major work, the Tractatus Logic
P_2_11 — Deontological Ethics: Duty, Rights, and the Categorical Imperative
Deontological ethics (from Greek deon, "duty" or "obligation") is the family of moral theories holding that the rightness or wrongness of an action depends on the action's conformity to moral rules, duties, or rights — n
ZE_5_12 — Ethics of Children: Rights, Development, and Moral Status
The ethics of children addresses a fundamental puzzle: children are full human beings deserving of moral respect, yet they lack the autonomy, rationality, and experience that ground many standard moral and political righ
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