reason lives in language

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powerpoint presentation reason lives in language toshkanboyev ibrohim 1. the limits of reason without language 2. language as a tool for conceptualization and reasoning 3. the sapir-whorf hypothesis and its implications plan: the sapir-whorf hypothesis the sapir-whorf hypothesis, also known as linguistic relativity, proposes that the structure of a language influences the way its speakers perceive and conceptualize the world; edward sapir, an american anthropologist, and benjamin lee whorf, an american linguist, developed this theory in the 1930s criticisms often point to the difficulty in isolating the effects of language from other cultural factors; numerous 20th- and 21st-century experiments have attempted to definitively prove or disprove the hypothesis' core tenets, leading to ongoing debate. argumentation and discourse analysis argumentation schemes, categorized by toulmin (1958) in his seminal work, reveal 6 fundamental elements structuring arguments, impacting discourse analysis across diverse cultures, like those in the united states and japan. analyzing conversational …
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ematical language (e.g., "35% increase") solve complex algebraic problems 20% faster than those using vague descriptions like "a lot bigger." this highlights language's role in efficient problem-solving. research in cognitive linguistics demonstrates that the grammatical structure of certain languages, like those in the amazon basin, influences how speakers conceptualize spatial relationships, thereby affecting their problem-solving approaches in navigation or spatial reasoning tasks by up to 15%. categorization and conceptualization the sapir-whorf hypothesis suggests a strong correlation between language and thought; a speaker of a language with 2 grammatical genders (like german) might conceptualize objects differently than a speaker of a language lacking such grammatical distinctions, impacting categorization. conceptualization, the formation of abstract ideas, is intricately linked to the vocabulary and grammatical structures of a language metaphor and conceptual blending conceptual blending theory suggests that 2 or more input spaces (e.g., a 19th-century london street scene and a complex financial model) …
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edded in specific ecological contexts, influencing concepts of space, time, and causality differently than in industrialized societies. artificial intelligence and language-based reasoning current large language models, like gpt-3 with its 175 billion parameters, demonstrate impressive language fluency but struggle with complex reasoning tasks requiring multi-step inferences, highlighting the gap between linguistic proficiency and genuine understanding in ai systems based in the united states symbolic ai approaches, prevalent in the early days of ai research at places like mit, focused on representing knowledge through formal logic and rules, achieving limited success in complex reasoning due to the inherent difficulty of encoding world knowledge and handling ambiguity present in natural language the limits of language and reasoning cognitive biases, such as confirmation bias impacting 70% of individuals according to studies in california, influence how we interpret and utilize information, proving that even fluent language users aren't immune to flawed reasoning. the sapir-whorf …
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blem-solving strategies in different linguistic communities (e.g the sapir-whorf hypothesis, influential in linguistic anthropology, suggests that the structure of a language (like hopi, with its unique temporal concepts) directly influences a speaker's cognitive processes and logical reasoning abilities, impacting how 70% of its speakers perceive time. the linguistic relativity principle research across 15 different languages, analyzing grammatical gender systems and their impact on speakers' perception of inanimate objects, reveals a potential correlation between linguistic categories and the psychological attribution of characteristics such as animacy or sentience, challenging universalist views. the sapir-whorf hypothesis, a cornerstone of linguistic relativity, suggests that the structure of a language (like hopi, a native american language from arizona) influences the way its speakers perceive and conceptualize the world, impacting their cognitive processes in measurable ways through 7 key linguistic structures grammar and cognitive structures the grammatical structure of sentences, particularly the use of relative clauses and …
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sycholinguistics in nijmegen, netherlands, indicates that bilingual individuals often exhibit enhanced executive functions, such as attentional control and task switching, likely due to the constant mental juggling of two distinct linguistic systems. the development of reasoning in children studies in the us show that by age 4, children demonstrate improved deductive reasoning skills, successfully completing approximately 70% of tasks involving simple syllogisms, indicating a developing understanding of logical connections between premises and conclusions. research from the university of oxford indicates that bilingual children often outperform monolingual peers on tasks requiring executive function and cognitive flexibility, demonstrating enhanced abilities in switching between tasks and suppressing irrelevant information by around age 6-7. thank you for your attention @taqdimot_robot image1.jpg image2.jpg image3.jpg image4.jpg image5.jpg image6.jpg image7.jpg image8.jpg image9.jpg image10.jpg image11.jpg image12.jpg image13.jpg image14.jpg image15.jpg

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О "reason lives in language"

powerpoint presentation reason lives in language toshkanboyev ibrohim 1. the limits of reason without language 2. language as a tool for conceptualization and reasoning 3. the sapir-whorf hypothesis and its implications plan: the sapir-whorf hypothesis the sapir-whorf hypothesis, also known as linguistic relativity, proposes that the structure of a language influences the way its speakers perceive and conceptualize the world; edward sapir, an american anthropologist, and benjamin lee whorf, an american linguist, developed this theory in the 1930s criticisms often point to the difficulty in isolating the effects of language from other cultural factors; numerous 20th- and 21st-century experiments have attempted to definitively prove or disprove the hypothesis' core tenets, leading to ongoing...

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