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#136 |
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It's a poorly worded question: do you mean 'deleting' as a political gesture, some equivalent of the American pastor's aggression, or 'deleting' just as tidying-up a reader?
By anyone's standards, the Koran is an important book: it created a language (Arabic), an Empire or two (the Arab Empire in North Africa and Spain, the Ottoman Empire) and a religion. However, the previous points about interpretation are important: the idea that you can just open up a Koran and then understand what one billion Muslims think makes no sense. And, by-the-way, I'm a born-again atheist. Nabeel |
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#137 |
The Introvert
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#138 |
High Priestess
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How can a book create a language? I'm skeptical
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#139 |
The Introvert
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#140 |
Orisa
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Well... The Qu'ran pretty much is the base for the language today known as Arabic, the first printed Bibles were the foundation of modern German... Since the very idea of writing comes with the military-administrative-religious concept involving a state, it's only normal that formal languages appear from those three social institutions.
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#141 |
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Why? Dante's works created modern Italian, if you want another example, and Caxton's choice of which English dialect he printed his books in was enormously influential in determining which of those (pretty mutually unintelligible) dialects did win out. There are all sorts of examples of books determining the path that the evolution of language has taken; you really shouldn't be skeptical about it.
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#142 | ||
High Priestess
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![]() A language has to exist before you write a book in it, otherwise nobody would be able to read the book (not to mention write it). I can admit a very influential book, such as the Bible or Koran, can help generalize a particular variant of a language, or fix some forms that were more fluctuating before, but that's hardly creating a language. More like an early form of globalization. People who spoke different dialects, more or less related, come to use a more common language. Quote:
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#143 | |
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I don't know anything about it, but I suspect that the Koran did something similar to this with Arabic - created a "standard" out of a mish-mash of regional dialects. |
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#144 | ||
Orisa
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luther_Bible
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#145 |
High Priestess
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Facilitate the emergence of a language and spread it in a wider area and population, that I can accept. It makes sense even. But this is absolutely not the same as creating a language. Volapük and Esperanto are created languages. Italian, German and Arabic are historical languages, evolved over centuries. That their evolution was affected by the diffusion of certain written words I can understand. But they were not created in a book.
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#146 | |
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#147 | |
Bah, humbug!
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Born-again atheist: does that mean you've been born-again again? ![]() Very nice first post, and welcome to MobileRead! |
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#148 |
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Dante actually did create the written Italian language. Prior to his time, spoken Italian (in all its various dialects) was regarded merely as a degenerate form of Latin, and all scholarly writing in Italy (as elsewhere) was in Latin. Dante was the person who took the vernacular spoken language (primarily his own Florentine dialect) and, for the first time, wrote it down. creating a language that he called "Italian". That's why he's called "The Father of Italian". This is hard to appreciate for an English speaker because nothing comparable has ever happened to English.
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#149 | |
Orisa
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Volapuk, Esperanto, Italian, German and Arabic are all "created" more or less consciously. The difference lies in its acceptance by the populace and their fortune as vehicle of expression for the elites. If a language is successful, it becomes spoken by many and it gets to have a history. If it is not, cryptographers of today must earn their bread by deciphering what was been said in a certain document. Arabic was no more than a weird, non-vocalic blabber used by local merchants until something aesthetically pleasing (the Koran) was written in it (adding vocals was a great move, e.g. ![]() Luther's printed Bible was distributed by the German princes who were joining the rebellion against the Holy German Empire. That indeed eased the adoption of the common language, which was finally established as we know it today by the Prussian elites in their wars against Austria. Spanish was eventually given shape by Alfonso X The Wise in his legal codes and game books. It is true that languages are live things and that they need to be adopted by people. However, there is always a volition, one person or a small group who consciously decides about the core of the language, deep in its roots. |
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#150 |
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I accept FlorenceArt's objections: 'creating' a language is a bit of an exaggeration. Harry is right: the Koran formalised and synthesised existing dialects into a single, more coherent linguistic form - just like Caxton and Dante did for English and Italian.
Legend has it that there were local merchants who were sceptical about Mohammed's thinking, but thought that the language was so beautiful, that they just had to agree. It's still a poorly-worded question. Nabeel |
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