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Language as the Basis of Civilization
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Narrado por:
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John Delino Ziegler Jr
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De:
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Boris Kriger
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From the first flicker of gesture around the prehistoric fire to the endless hum of machine speech in the digital age, this book traces the evolution of communication — and with it, the evolution of thought, culture, and consciousness itself.
Language is the foundation of civilization: the matrix from which society, morality, and meaning arise. Yet it is also our most dangerous creation — capable of liberation or control, truth or deception, empathy or manipulation. Through language, we built worlds; through language, we can also destroy them.
Moving from anthropology to artificial intelligence, from philosophy to neuroscience, this work explores the creative and destructive powers of words — how they shape perception, emotion, memory, and belief. It journeys through the metaphors that form our minds, the grammars that structure our moral worlds, and the technologies that now threaten to erase linguistic diversity and with it, the depth of human thought.
In an age of algorithms and instant translation, when language is increasingly standardized, simplified, and automated, the book asks a question that cuts to the core of our future:
Can civilization survive without the imperfections of language — without its ambiguity, poetry, and silence — or will the perfection of communication mean the death of humanity’s voice?
Both a philosophical inquiry and a cultural warning, this book reveals that every sentence we speak builds — or erodes — the world we live in. To understand language is to understand ourselves, for in the end, the story of language is the story of being human.