It's hard to imagine what thoughts sound like before language, insofar as those thoughts are not already auditory content — Welkin Rogue
One necessary condition is that there be a sufficient richness of vocalizations already present for thinking to be able to do anything at all. Otherwise as you say it would just be playing sounds in the head to no effect. — hypericin
RightSo is the thought that the crucial auditory simulations that this neurological development facilitated were simulations of the organism's own vocalisations? — Welkin Rogue
If you think about it, many modern words which can stand alone as a sentence could have served as primitive vocalizations: hmm. wow! huh. huh? awwww. yes! no!Prior to language, these vocalisations would have been, I guess, various emotive vocalisations. — Welkin Rogue
Right. Before this neuroevolutionary event, there was only public "language". After it, there is public and private "language", each informing and contributing to the other, in a cycle. Individual innovations could e transmitted to the group, who would transmit their collective innovations to other groups, and to the next generation. I believe the expressive limit of prelinguistic vocalizations would be quickly reached.The development of this increasingly complex subvocalisation must be informed by social and cooperative processes, as everyone is going through the same developmental process. — Welkin Rogue
I think the key immediate benefit is improved general cognition, without spending too much neurally. Something like what we do with the visual feedback loop. At least for me, the visual loop is not nearly as developed as the auditory. It is non-linguistic. And yet, it is indispensable for thinking, if it were to disappear (as it does sometimes when I am under a lot of stress) I would be mentally crippled.but we all like an explanation in terms of adaptation. — Welkin Rogue
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