Speaker: Prof Asifa Majid
Abstract
Why are some things relatively easy to express in language (e.g., geometric shapes) but others hard (e.g., odors)?
Various explanations have been suggested for this differential ineffability (i.e., the impossibility of putting phenomena into words).
Perhaps it is due to something fundamental about the cognitive architecture of our minds~brains.
The ease of naming visual as opposed to olfactory entities, for example, has been attributed to the amount of brain area devoted to processing each sensory modality.
Accordingly, there appears to be asymmetries in our ability to represent sensory information—studies show people generally report vivid visual and auditory imagery, for example, but only weak smell and taste imagery.
Based on fieldwork and laboratory studies, I illustrate how differential expressibility across the senses reflects cultural, not just cognitive biases.
Things that elude description in English are nevertheless easily conveyed in other languages, highlighting the role culture and experience play in understanding the nature and limits of language and cognition.
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