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Science

Human Language May Have Evolved To Help Our Ancestors Make Tools 154

sciencehabit writes: If there's one thing that distinguishes humans from other animals, it's our ability to use language. But when and why did this trait evolve? A new study concludes that the art of conversation may have arisen early in human evolution, because it made it easier for our ancestors to teach each other how to make stone tools — a skill that was crucial for the spectacular success of our lineage. The study involved getting a number of college students to try to make their own primitive stone tools, some using language, others not. The team discovered that only those that used language were able to make effective tools.
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Human Language May Have Evolved To Help Our Ancestors Make Tools

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  • what language is (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Human language _is_ a tool.

    Dumbass.

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      Human language _is_ a tool...Dumbass.

      Hmm, I wonder if the invention of cussing helped tool-making by making errors more memorable.

      "No, pointy end go in dino, not flat end. Me use flat end bonk you, poop face!"

      • I doubt that stone age man spoke fluent American like that.

        • I doubt that stone age man spoke fluent American like that.

          Nah, probably plain old English.

        • by mcgrew ( 92797 ) *

          No, but he DID speak. This theory is the dumbest theory I've seen coming from someone who should know better for years; it's already been disproven before the dumbass thought of it.

          Other apes have language. Prairie dogs have language. Even dogs have language, even though the only three things they say are "I'm hurt", "I'm lonely" and "get off my property before I eat you!" Previous STUDIES have shown this.

          Why do these educated morons think vocal cords evolved for in the first place??

          Also, the summary is lik

          • No other species laughs (Hyenas' "laughs" aren't from humor) ...

            This is demonstrably not true. [wikipedia.org] Also, I'm pretty skeptical about saying that at least some animals, particularly our close cousins the great apes don't have a sense of humor. There seems clear evidence they do.

      • by Hognoxious ( 631665 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @08:17AM (#48810277) Homepage Journal

        I wonder if the invention of cussing helped tool-making

        Speaking as someone who is rather clumsy at carpentry, I reckon it was the other way round.

        • True fact: The first utterance of "Motherfucker!" came shortly after the invention of the hammer.

          • No, more important that using language to make tools is using language to get other people to gape at you while you use tools. How many times have I heard, "Honey, can you pass me that screwdriver/nail/hammer/allen wrench/Manly Item so you will know how Manly I am"?
  • In other news... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by ThomK ( 194273 )

    ... speaking to each other improves communication. Brilliant.

    • Speaking helps you pick up chicks, or nag husband to bring home fat bear kill to feed kids; both will also spectacularly advance the species.

    • It means that the first speakers were tech conference speakers! That's why it's news for nerds.
    • by Richard Kirk ( 535523 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @04:55AM (#48809741)

      Yes, this is how science works. It is obvious that talking will help people make flint tools. We all know that. But how do we know that? Saying 'it's obvious' is not helpful. It is also obvious that you can get better at making tools when you can watch someone who is good at it. But you can get plenty of people how have never chipped flint tools, and see how much better they are when they watch someone, when they mutely interact with someone, and when they talk. Some gifted people can pick up musical instruments just by watching, but making flint tools seems to be helped a lot by language.

      The article also says that this is suggestive, but could not be considered a proof. They know they have not got ancient people to experiment on. It is not practical to try the same tests with a mammoth hunt. It's not a time machine, but we use what we have.

      Then you get a +5 'insightful' mark-up for jeering at it.

      • "Yes, this is how science works."

        No, this experiment is as stupid as it can be. They take a group that *already* uses a "tool" (language) as the means to acomplish a goal (collaboration), then private them of the tool and find that they are now worse at acomplishing the goal.

        In other words: for a man with a hammer, any problem seems a nail. Now you take him his hammer and you find he's worse at driving nails. Brilliant.

      • The OP isn't jeering because the idea is obvious; they're jeering because having an experiment to PROVE the obvious is stupid. That isn't how science works, that's how time-serving bureaucracy in research works, when you get a grant to prove something utterly obvious is a waste of money, time, and intellectual resources.

        And no, I doubt there are any gifted people that can pick up musical instruments just by watching; listening is pretty intrinsic to what you're discussing there, too.

        In any case, to have an

        • Not everything that is obvious is true, and some of the most important experiments in science have failed to find the obvious.

          That said, sloppy experiments that don't really test what they're claimed to test for are worthless.

      • Yes, this is how science works. It is obvious that talking will help people make flint tools. We all know that. But how do we know that? Saying 'it's obvious' is not helpful. It is also obvious that you can get better at making tools when you can watch someone who is good at it. But you can get plenty of people how have never chipped flint tools, and see how much better they are when they watch someone, when they mutely interact with someone, and when they talk. Some gifted people can pick up musical instruments just by watching, but making flint tools seems to be helped a lot by language.

        The article also says that this is suggestive, but could not be considered a proof. They know they have not got ancient people to experiment on. It is not practical to try the same tests with a mammoth hunt. It's not a time machine, but we use what we have.

        No, it's how junk science works -- where you conduct an small and very badly flawed experiment, dominated by an effect that has been very well known in the literature for 30 years, but then claim the experiment is "suggestive" of a grandiose conclusion that the experiment clearly doesn't support in order to garner some publicity for yourself from journalists.

        The researchers found the "exciting" result that the groups that received more feedback in their instruction performed better, and the group that recei

      • It is obvious that talking will help people make flint tools. We all know that. But how do we know that? Saying 'it's obvious' is not helpful

        Actually this experiment is not how you know that. You know communication helps as a priori knowledge which is also why it's obvious (see below if you need an explanation). You missed the point entirely which is not if it helps but how much it helps... the larger debate is when humans first started communicating, it's helpful to know how much communication helps developing stone tools because that period in time could be a candidate if it's significant.

        It's obvious that communication will help because it's

      • No, the reason this experiment is stupid is that you are taking a subject group that have relied heavily on verbal communication there entire lives and then asking them to do the same task with and without verbal communication. Gee, I wonder which condition will produce better results.

        Car analogy: You take a bunch of adults who've been driving for 20+ years and then tell half to drive through an obstacle course while using their feet to press the pedals and the other half to drive while using their hands to

      • Actually there's a huge problem. All of the participants have grown up in a world where language is frequently and predominantly used to to communicate. They would really need to find a group of individuals who haven't used language or have a much more limited language. Without language, I would imagine that individuals would be forced to learned by imitation and therefor may be significantly better at it than people who are not.

        As you point out, it's not something we can easily test, but the conclusions
      • It is obvious that talking will help people make flint tools. We all know that.

        It's a bit of a jump from there to conclude that talking developed for that reason.

        It's obvious that fingers help you to play the guitar. We all know that.

        Conclusion: fingers evolved so we could all be Jimmy Page.

        That's how science works, is it? Send me a postcard from Stockholm.

    • "Look what Thag do!"
  • Junk science (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Maybe human language evolved so we could share cooking tips, or maybe so we could more easily find a mate, or raise kids, or navigate using the night sky, or yell "HELP! I'm being eaten by a tiger!", or tell our fellow tribe members that a flood is coming, or that we have a thorn in our foot that the local witchdoctor needs to pull out...

    The ONLY way to find out things like this (historical FACTs, rather than historical POSSIBILITIES) is with a time machine, which nobody has.

    The sort of people who write thi

    • "I like objective truth and objective reality"

      Yep, those are nice. And they're very helpful for about 1% of life. The other 99% is messy and emotional but still worth figuring out, because it's the 99% part that gives us the most trouble.

    • Re:Junk science (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Sique ( 173459 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @04:26AM (#48809693) Homepage
      But it's the best we can have. And there are still ways to test theories about historical events. If you can predict future archeological finds from your hypothesis, then there is a possibility that your hypothesis about the historical facts is close to the truth. If you find an ancient document agreeing with the hypothetical account for some event, then it's quite possible that the events happened in the way the hypothesis stated. And if for instance an archeological experiment shows that some object that was thought to be a tool for a certain task proves to be quite inadequate for the task, then there is reason to doubt the hypothesis about that object.

      Yes, we can't build a time machine and go back in time to check. But we can make educated guesses about it. We can't also travel to a quasar and check if our theories about the behaviour of quasars are right, but we can make educated guesses about them, and there is no reason to throw out everything we hypothetize about quasars or call research into quasars pseudo-science, just because we can't get there.

    • Oh look something we don't know about. Let's NOT study it!

      News for Nerds my ass.
    • I've always thought the theory of language evolving in order to make "promises" was the most insightful and reasonable one I've ever heard. The ability to ask for favors with the promise of a favor later is extremely important in the development of human intelligence. Of course, there were drawbacks. The ability to make promises soon gave rise to the ability to lie. And the politician was born.

  • "may have evolved to help our ancestors make tools"
    That's a really big "maybe" based on some college students tasked to do it. It seems to me that language would be huge advantage for any activity, not just tool making.
  • by ArcadeMan ( 2766669 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @01:01AM (#48809161)

    PC LOAD LETTER? What the fuck does that mean?

    • It means the connection between your PC and printer has had an underflow of "LETTER". Best fixed by sending another 100 copies of War and Peace to the printer. You know, to get those fat electrons moving down the wire again.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    "Man invented language to satisfy his deep need to complain." -- Lily Tomlin

  • by binarstu ( 720435 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @01:34AM (#48809253)

    From what I can tell from TFA, this study purports to test the hypothesis that language evolved as a means to transmit the knowledge of how to make tools. The researchers found that present-day humans (college students, to be exact) can best teach other how to make a stone tool if they are allowed to talk to each other. The authors interpret this as evidence in support of their hypothesis.

    The obvious problem, though, is that they ran the experiment on a bunch of subjects that have spent their entire lives (minus the first year or so) using language as their primary means of communication. So what result would you expect with this study population? The experiment is hardly a test of the conditions under which early language might have evolved.

    • I bet the students that could speak would succed more at any of the following tasks;
      Planning/carrying out a hunt.
      Sending people to good food gathering areas
      Warning of danger
      Etc

      All this study shows is that language is a good way of exchanging information.

      • I bet the students that could speak would succed more at any of the following tasks;
        Planning/carrying out a hunt.
        Sending people to good food gathering areas
        Warning of danger Etc

        Exactly. One could use the exact same study design to "test" the hypothesis that any or all of the things you mentioned are why we evolved language, and the results would undoubtedly be the same. The only general conclusion one might draw is that humans evolved language to more effectively communicate with each other, which is practically self-evident.

        All this study shows is that language is a good way of exchanging information.

        That, and also that humans who spend their entire lives depending on language to communicate with one another can't communicate as effectively when they sud

    • "bunch of subjects that have spent their entire lives (minus the first year or so) "

      And quite a long at uni when all totalled up while drunk and then waking up with some strange person the next morning and finding they can only communicate in grunts due to a mysterious headache and sudden revulsion which also prevents them communicating at an effective volume for most of the day.

    • by dotancohen ( 1015143 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @05:44AM (#48809881) Homepage

      This is a classic example of Convenience Sampling, a sampling method which chooses samples based on how easy they are to procure. Guess where the researches were located, that all their test subjects were students?

      Wikipedia calls it Accidental Sampling:
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A... [wikipedia.org]

      • "This is a classic example of Convenience Sampling"

        Yes, it is, but not because of what you think.

        "Guess where the researches were located, that all their test subjects were students?"

        The fact of them being students or attorneys at law or plumbers is irrelevant. It is convenience sampling because they needed a sample that already were using language to communicate in order to deprive them of this tool (which is also the utter flaw of the experiment) and it happens there is only one tipology that already fit

      • by schlachter ( 862210 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @10:32AM (#48811157)

        I studied comparative cognition (anthropology branch) and I can tell you that there are many studies that show that Dolphins use complex, syntactically based language in the wild. Chimps can learn complex language in the lab, but they don't have it in the wild like Dolphins do.

        Dolphins also aren't known to use tools. So, this seems to be a obvious counter example to their hypothesis.

    • I think it is a bit more than just building tools. But also a method for communicating coordinated hunting.

      We should look at one syllable or easy to pronounce words that are common across multiple languages.

      We get a lot of nouns, and basic verbs. These can be used for creating tools, But also for pack hunting.

    • No, the obvious problem is that they assumed that if language is useful to creating tools then language evolved to help create tools. One might as well assume that, since many people have oily noses, that noses evolved to lubricate things.

      • You're 100% wrong.

        It is f-f-f-f-freezing here at the moment. Capacitive touch screen phones don't work when you're wearing gloves.

        Noses evolved to operate smartphones in the cold.

  • by bmo ( 77928 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @01:34AM (#48809255)

    Recent evidence has come to light that suggests that pyramid style chain
    letters may have pre-dated Dave Rhodes by a considerable margin.
    Palaentologists recently deciphered the following, painted on a cave
    wall on the slopes of Kilimanjaro.
    MAKE POINTY STICKS FAST!!!

    Hello, not-tribe-member. Urk name Urk. Many moons ago, Urk in bad way.
    Urk kicked out of cave by Thag. Thag bigger than Urk, Thag take Urk
    spiky club, Urka (Urk wo-man). Urk not able kill deer, must eat leaves,
    berries. Urk flee from wolves.

    Today, Urk big chief. Urk have best cave, many wives, many pointy sticks.
    Urk tell how.

    WHAT DO: make one pointy stick and take to cave places below. Add own
    cave place to bottom of list, take cave place off top. Put new message
    on walls many caves. Wait. Many pointy sticks soon come! This not crime!
    Urk ask shaman, gods say okay.

    HERE LIST:

          1) Urk
                First cave
                Olduvai Gorge

      few) Thag (not that Thag, other Thag)
                old dead tree
                by laked shaped like mammoth

      few) Og
                big rock with overhang
                near pig game trail

    Many) Zog
                river caves
                where river meet big water

    Urk hope not-tribe-member do what Urk say do. That only way it work.

    (c) Dave Hemming 1998. Circulate how you please, but keep my name on it.

  • Which is something that knowing a programming language isn't much help with.

  • or Grrooink, gimme dat rock?? or Grroink, like to see cave etchings? I'm prone to think the latter
  • It mostly shows that language helps propagate fallacies.
  • by wonkey_monkey ( 2592601 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @03:38AM (#48809565) Homepage

    The study involved getting a number of college students to try to make their own primitive stone tools, some using language, others not. The team discovered that only those that used language were able to make effective tools.

    Did they also try hunting a mammoth with language vs. without language? Or caring for an elderly tribe member with/without language? Or building a hut?

  • by jandersen ( 462034 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @03:41AM (#48809577)

    Somehow it still annoys me that people think of evolution in terms of some sort of deliberate purpose or 'providence'. It gives a completely skewed idea of what evolution is and it feeds religious superstition.

    Evolution has no 'direction' - life doesn't evolve from 'worse' to 'better'; those terms have no meaning in this context. If one must assign some sort of direction to evolution, it would be something like 'life often tends to become more complex over time' - the word 'often' being central here, as there are many examples of organisms becoming simpler with time.

    Evolution most certainly has no purpose - a trait evolves because it happens to be advantageous at that given moment. The ability to speak - ie. communicate vocally, following a sort of grammar - seems to have very deep roots, and it is easy to understand why: a sound signal is fast and carries far in both water and air, and it allows you to communicate with little expenditure of energy. You can use it for mating calls or warnings, it can be used to maintain group integrity etc. It is, incidentally, also useful for communicating knowledge: 'I know where there is water, follow me' or 'avoid humans, they are dangerous'.

    Clearly the ability to communicate clearly is an advantage when you teach others how to make tools, but it is false to look for purpose in this - the only purpose of communication is the purpose the communicator puts into it.

    • Somehow it still annoys me that people think of evolution in terms of some sort of deliberate purpose or 'providence'.

      They don't. It's just that it's easier - and shorter - to phrase it that way rather than the way you did.

  • by BitZtream ( 692029 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @03:59AM (#48809635)

    If there's one thing that distinguishes humans from other animals, it's our ability to use language.

    Hate to break it to you, but humans aren't the only ones who know and use language. We're not really that distinguishable from many animals if thats your deciding factor. Dolphins, Whales, Octopus ... they all probably would like to have a word with you.

    • by Livius ( 318358 )

      Um, no. Many animals have communication systems, and a few can demonstrate some rudimentary symbolic language at the level of an 18-month-old human at best, but none have anything the equivalent of the human language faculty.

      • Actually, prairie dogs have been found to have a fairly complex language system: http://www.npr.org/2011/01/20/132650631/new-language-discovered-prairiedogese [npr.org].

        Sure it's not as advanced as human language, but we're only reaching the point where we ourselves are capable of determining just how good the languages of other creatures actually are. There's a lot of it we can't even begin to understand because we haven't been able to fully understand the context and we can't exactly sit down with most animals a
    • Hate to break it to you, but humans aren't the only ones who know and use language. We're not really that distinguishable from many animals if thats your deciding factor. Dolphins, Whales, Octopus ... they all probably would like to have a word with you.

      I see what you did there.

  • by wvmarle ( 1070040 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @05:12AM (#48809805)

    There are many more animals that are known to communicate through sound, some rather sophisticated. Various whales and dolphins are known to use different calls, some primates, even some species of bat are believed to exchange information such as where to find food through sounds. Calls are also a common way of parents finding their children when living in big groups. Of course it's not as advanced as human speech, and almost certainly not useful to communicate about abstract topics. To me, it is a form of speech nonetheless.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      But it is not "language". Language has a very specific meaning, and one of the requirements is a syntax. It's not just that other animals don't have forms of communication that "aren't as advanced", it's that what they do is completely different from language (see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Language). Language itself is an amazing trait, and the fact that one species on the planet developed it is absolutely incredible.

    • by dave420 ( 699308 )
      Don't forget the waggle dance performed by bees to tell the hive where to forage...
    • by JigJag ( 2046772 )

      The summary highlights that humans are very special: no other species can communicate as sophisticated concepts as humans can.
      What you say makes sense and in a way I agree with you, in the same way that an abacus and a microchip are alike since they can both do calculations.

      • The summary doesn't do this, it just states "If there's one thing that distinguishes humans from other animals, it's our ability to use language", moving on to mentioning the skill of conversation. That are things that are not totally unique to humans, other species can communicate in that way as well. But just being able to use language is not enough; it's abstract language that's really unique to humans.

        Things that really do set us apart are very different. One thing that I really can't think of an animal

  • It is not an accident that the countries that advanced the fastest during the industrial revolution had some unique language features such as compound words. English has a number of other advantages such as the ability to absorb words from other languages, lack of gender on most nouns and precision.

  • did the cavemen go to?

    Comparing college students to cavemen and drawing conclusions about language seems a little silly. College students don't do anything but communicate. Cavemen did everything- they hunted/gathered/raised food, made tools, entertained themselves. How do we know language didn't develop because of the desire for entertainment? Maybe they got bored sitting around a fire grunting. maybe they wanted to hear some jokes.

  • "f there's one thing that distinguishes humans from other animals, it's our ability to use language."

    Wrong. People who say things like that just aren't listening and clearly don't have enough contact with other species.

    Reality: Other animals have extensive languages of their own and some of them even take the time to learn ours so as to communicate with us.

    We raise livestock. We have a multigenerational working dog pack. They have an extensive language of their own plus they have a pidgin language they use

    • Wrong Headed (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      I encourage you to read more about language. It is NOT equivalent to communication, and despite you ostensibly detesting "thinkers in ivory towers", you simple are not going to understand something as complex as language by sitting around anthropomorphizing farm animals.

      • by pubwvj ( 1045960 )

        Actually, I've studied this extensively. I didn't say language was the equivelant of communication. Sadly you didn't actually read what I wrote but rather reacted without understanding. Just the problem.

        I don't 'sit around and anthropomorphize farm animals' and you really should get out more. If you interacted with animals you would discover that there are other tool making and tool using animals that pass on cultural information. You fail to see it because you don't interact with animals in many generation

      • If simple communication is not language, then why is it called body language?!
  • by Livius ( 318358 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @07:32AM (#48810151)

    Language provides a capacity for learning that is collective and cumulative. The usefulness of language in tool-making and vast numbers of other tasks is obvious.

    First, that doesn't tell us whether tool-making preceded language or the reverse.

    Second, it doesn't tell us anything about how humans acquired language. Using sounds and/or gestures as symbolic communication elements is hard enough, but that's the easy part, and it can't happen until there is a common set of thoughts to exchange. You need shared language inside the head before you can start speaking and being understood - that's the hard part that linguists puzzle over.

    • Chimpanzees sometimes make tools, so tool making almost certainly preceded language, unless Chimpanzees are descended from animals that had language but lost it.

      Possibly the most interesting thing about humans is that there is an exponential increase in diversity of objects in the archaeological record, which seems to start somewhere around 100.000 to 50.000 ago. This exponential increase in diversity of objects produced continues to this day, especially if you count virtual objects like digital art.

      What ha

  • Imagine same test, but requiring students to arrange their poo in shapes resembling flowers when seen from top of the cliff. Obviously, students which can shout commands to ones at the bottom will fare better than ones which will not be allowed to use language. Does it mean that language was evolved as a way to arrange poo in shape of flowers?

  • Another possible explanation for our rapid development of language was put forth by Elaine Morgan in books like The Descent of Woman and The Aquatic Ape.

    The suggestion was that there is lots of physiological evidence (subcutaneous fat layer, distribution of hair, infants seemingly instant ability to swim, even upright posture) that we as a species spent time (a million years?) as semi-aquatic. (in the sense that we wallowed around in the shallow water near shore most of the day) This had some advantages (ke
    • That sounds right. I also think we have a gene that allows us, even urges us, to make stone tools. But in the aquatic ape, forced to swim with the stone tools, that gene was ... suppressed.
  • I've read once that it takes roughly 8-10 steps for live to happen and evolve into intelligent life.

    Language, abundant extra brain power and limbs that become free to use tools are among these steps.

    The fact that we walk upright and have our front paws free, have a parallel and a sequential brain-half both working together and against one another (i.e. doulbe-checking each other), opposable thumbs and a super-flexible larynx are quite awesome and are the thing that give us the edge and let us win the cosmic

  • .... the decay of language in modern times. All you have to do is walk into Harbor Freight, point and grunt.

  • The results from this experiment are misleading, but to be fair it's a hypothesis that might be flat out untestable. I think we'd need a number of deaf-mutes to perform this study, because language is itself a tool, so asking a person who relies on this tool to work without it is like asking a craftsman to create something without his.
  • To say what group members were doing away from the group- hunting, fornicating, etc. Social animals always watch each other's behavior.
  • The experiment of comparing how communication helped some one make better flint tools is not very good. All the participants know communication is possible. For example only dogs will follow your finger and look at what you are pointing at. All other animals will only look at your finger. It requires a certain mental make up to even imagine someone is trying to communicate. So this experiment is not very good.

    But Steven Pinker looked at the structure of the language and came up with some deep insights.:

    1.

  • Human language may have evolved to help our ancestors describe the feeling of a good bowel movement.

    There's as much evidence for my theory as there is for theirs.

    • there is even more evidence for my theory, that speech helped human males get female fucking partners. Don't underestimate the need for the primary tool of the art of seduction

  • Scientists also discovered that it's quite difficult to build tools without lungs. Perhaps we evolved lungs for toolmaking?
  • Well, if language was created to pass on the methods to make tools then it also implies that some languages would be better for certain tools and so forth. Just like computer languages. With English and Spanish being the languages with the most words in the world. Are they the best universal languages for creating any kind of tools? What about the grammar? and how does it affect toolmaking? I better go back to coding...

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