Skip to main content
Start main content

Prof. William S-Y. WANG, Department of Chinese and Bilingual Studies

 

Brain + Language = Mind. First International Forum on Neurolinguistics. Nanjing University of Science and Technology (online), 3 December 2022

Abstract
Brain cells in animals began to emerge several hundred millions years ago. As these cells continued to multiply and brains continued to grow, a sharp transition took place in ancient humans with the making of stone tools. Our brain tripled in size over this span of time, presumably co-evolving with the emergence, elaboration, and refinement of language, from a few crude, holistic, multimodal gestures, to the powerful languages of today. Modern language is supported by a full complement of cognitive abilities in the human brain. Many other animals have evolved similar abilities to ours, but varying in degree, and therefore cannot learn a modern language. However, as these abilities reach the necessary levels of development in human infants, they uniformly acquire language and via language gradually acquire a human mind. From an evolutionary perspective, brain and mind, together with other associated entities like consciousness, intelligence, etc., all interacted as complex adaptive systems facilitated by language.

 

Your browser is not the latest version. If you continue to browse our website, Some pages may not function properly.

You are recommended to upgrade to a newer version or switch to a different browser. A list of the web browsers that we support can be found here