Re: what is etymology? (linguistics and biology)
- From: "Franz Gnaedinger" <frgn@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 23 Sep 2006 04:13:00 -0700
Life and language, part 1, what is language?
what is special about human language?
ideas and insights from 1974/75
Language is the means of getting help, support
and understanding from those we depend upon
in one way or another --- and every means of
getting help, support and understanding may
be called language, on whatever level of life
it occurs.
What is special about human life? the use of
artificial things. What is special about human
language? the use of words that name artificial
things and make us see a world full of objects:
cup, jar, table, floor, wall, window, garden,
fence, road, car, pole, flag ... apple, tree,
bird, hill, sky, cloud, wind, light, nature,
human being, life, body and soul ...
Humans succeded in building tents, huts
and houses, and saw the sky as a giant
baldachin, or an overarching vault. If one
can form animals in clay, and carve human
figurines from wood or stone, one can also
name animals and human beings. A statue
may be very true to nature and appear most
lively, but there will always be something
missing when compared with a real human
being - what's missing is called life, as if
it were a thing of its own. Proportions of
a figurine evoke the way organs and
members of the living being cooperate,
how all elements of life go together, and
the word for this cooperation is psyche,
soul. Using a band you can tie things
together, while the word and joins words,
German Bund und (you can find similar
words in ancient Greek and in Latin).
Words are sets, while sentences can be
understood as overlapping sets, one of them
belonging to the word be. Or sentences can
be given as equations, which can then be
transformed into more specified objects:
overlapping sets: ball be round
sentence: The ball is round.
equation: the ball - is - a round one
object: the round ball
overlapping sets: ball be rolling
sentence: The ball rolls.
equation: the ball - is - a rolling one
object: the rolling ball
The more things we use, the more specialized
our lifes become, and the better we have to
explain our personal situation before we can
hope to get our needs satisfied and our wishes
fulfilled. Which is the reason why most of our
language describes and explains the world.
Nevertheless, all of our language serves needs
and wishes.
Regards Franz Gnaedinger www.seshat.ch
Glossary of the new Magdalenian words, part 47
Some composites:
AC CA --- an expanse of land with water (ac)
sky (ca), possible name of Goebekli Tepe,
southeast Anatolia, Urfa region, north of the
Syrian Harran plain, 11 600 - 9 500 BP,
represented as a lying H, the horizontal bars
meaning earth and sky, the small vertical
bar meaning rain, falling from the sky and
filling the river beds; Latin aqua for water,
Indo-European akka for the earth goddess
(Pokorny)
CER MAS --- divine stag (cer) master (mas);
may have become Hermaes, messenger
of the gods, alter ego of Homer in the
Odyssey
CER PIR --- divine stag (cer) fire (pir), divine
stag protecting the western horizon where
the sun sets, and the eastern horizon where
the sun rises from; would have become
Cerberos guarding the Underworld with
fiery breath
CER AC CLE --- divine stag (cer) expanse
of land with water (ac) judge and protector
(cle as lateral association to cre for ruler);
would survive in Heracles
SHA CA UR --- ruler (sha) sky (ca) color (ur);
may have become Sseyr, Middle Helladic
name of Zeus (Derk Ohlenroth), and English
sky. Sky, in Shakespeare's time, meant cloud.
Clouds, one may say, rule the heavens. When
I pondered this idea last year I saw a big cloud
in the shape of the beautiful profile of a bearded
Greek god pass my window ...
CA UR MAS DAG --- sky (ca) color (ur) master
(mas) four (dag), ruler of the four (corners of
the) heavens; may have become the supreme
Persian god Ahura-Mazda
BRA MAN --- right arm (bra) right hand (man);
may have become Brahma who created the
world playing his lyra
SHA CA --- ruler (sha) sky (ca); may have
become Hebrew Jahve
ABA BRA --- father (aba) right arm (bra); may
have become Abram, the Lord's right arm,
he who carries out the Lord's will
SA RAA --- downward (sa) ray of light (raa),
she on whom falls a ray from the heavens;
may have become Sarah
AS RAA --- upward (as) ray of light (raa);
may have become Asherah, the tree of life
whose branches, pointing upward, represent
heavenly abodes of deities
GHI SHA AC --- call of a bird (ghi) ruler (sha)
sky (ca), supreme ruler of the Guyenne,
later of Upper Mesopotamia; may survive
in Isaac
SHA AC --- ruler (sha) expanse of land with
water (ac), a minor ruler; may have become
Jacques Jack Ja'aqob Jacob, also sagan
for the ruler of the province of Judah
AS RAA ) --- upward (as) ray of light (raa)
Lord (clicking L); may be the origin of Jacob's
ladder, the Lord on top of a sun ray, and would
have become Israel, Jacob's byname
DA PAD --- away from (da) activity of feet
(pad); may be the origin of David: delivered
from the paw of the lion, delivered from the
paw of the bear, delivered from the hand of
Goliath ... Consider the increasing size of
lion, cave bear, and towering warrior in arms.
David may be an archetypical name, much
as Arthur from ARC TYR, he who can take it
up with a cave bear.
Asia Minor may have been the place where
Magdalenian met Afro-Asiatic, Magdalenian
itself being an early northern branch of
Afro-Asiatic.
Glossary of the new Magdalenian words, part 45
EID EIS, DIE SIE, IDE ISE, EDI ESI, IED IES,
DEI SEI --- appearances and reality
EID --- appearances, images; ancient Greek eidos
for appearances, idea, notion, concept, imagination,
sort, kind, essence, state
EIS --- reality behind all appearances, ideas and
notions, idea of all ideas; ancient Greek eis for
the only one
DIE --- daylight; Latin dies for day
SIE --- to see, feel, reason, be; Latin siem sum
for I am, "cogito ergo sum" (Descartes)
IDE --- idea; ancient Greek idea for appearance,
form, shape, sort, kind, essence, state
ISE --- equal, what different appearances,
notions, ideas and concepts have in common;
ancient Greek isos for equal
EDI --- pleasure of looking at appearances and
images; ancient Greek hedonae for pleasure
(hedonism)
ESI --- meditating; ancient Greek haesychazo
for I am quiet, still, have it peaceful (...)
IED --- following appearances, notions and ideas;
Indo-European iet for to strive, aspire
IES --- trying to find the basic reality behind
the ever changing appearances; Indo-European
ies for to boil, bubble, well up, foam (Pokorny),
appropriate when one considers the steam
produced by many a scientific discussion ...
DEI --- logical order and sequence; *dein-caps
for by turns (Pokorny)
SEI --- existence of the basic reality behind
all the different appearances, notions, ideas
and concepts; Latin sei for sic, it is so
Glossary of the new Magdalenian words, part 44
DIR SIR, RID RIS, IRD IRS, DRI SRI, RDI RSI,
IDR ISR --- how to cope with adversities and
calamtites
DIR --- to look out for signs of adversities and
calamities, to face them directly when they occur,
which may go along with fear, also to speak about
them; Latin dirus for announcing calamities,
horrible, dirae for signs that announce harm and
calamity, directus for direct, perhaps English fear,
French dire (pronounced dir) for to speak, talk
comparative form SIR --- to warn of adversities
and calamities, sometimes in vain, as some
people seem to be attracted by danger and risk,
while others don't care; Cassandra warned the
Trojans in vain, the sirens, ancient Greek seiraen
Latin Siren, lured many a sailor into doom, while
our sirens warn of an imminent danger
inverse RID --- to laugh, to laugh a danger away,
or to encourage each other laughing; Latin ridere
for to laugh
comparative form RIS --- to mock and deride;
Latin risus for laughter and laughing stock
IRD --- to be angry; Latin iratus for I am angry
comparative form IRS --- to be very angry; Latin
irasco for I am angry
inverse DRI --- being helpless in the case of
calamities and adversities, getting hard, harsh,
bitter, sad; ancient Greek drimys for cutting,
sharp, stringing, astringent, harsh, bitter (...),
Latin tristis for sad, afflicted, hurting, harsh,
unfriendly, gloomy, angry, horrible, dangerous,
earnest, cold, hard
comparative form SRI --- wishing to get rid of
adversities and calamities, to eradicate their
causes; Latin sario for to weed out (etymology
unclear says my dictionary)
RDI --- to cope in a rational way with adversities
and calamities; Latin ratio for reason, rationalis
for rational
comparative form RSI --- to even out emotions
in order to find a reasonable solutiuon and to
cope in a rational way with dangers, adversities
and calamities; Latin rasilis for smoth(ed)
inverse IDR --- to cope with adversities and
calamities on the basis of knowledge; ancient
Greek idris for knowing, experienced
comparative form ISR --- to invoke divine
knowledge and advice in order to cope with
adversities and calamities; *isaros for strong,
sacred
.
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