A Reporter at Large: The Interpreter : The New Yorker

The article described the extreme simplicity of the tribe’s living conditions and culture.

The Pirahã, Everett wrote, have no numbers, no fixed color terms, no perfect tense, no deep memory, no tradition of art or drawing, and no words for “all,” “each,” “every,” “most,” or “few”—terms of quantification believed by some linguists to be among the common building blocks of human cognition.

via A Reporter at Large: The Interpreter : The New Yorker.

Does Your Language Shape How You Think? – NYTimes.com

if different languages influence our minds in different ways, this is not because of what our language allows us to think but rather because of what it habitually obliges us to think about.

via Does Your Language Shape How You Think? – NYTimes.com.
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