Artigo Revisado por pares

Spirits as ‘ready to hand’

2004; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 4; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1177/1463499604047918

ISSN

1741-2641

Autores

Rane Willerslev,

Tópico(s)

Linguistics and Cultural Studies

Resumo

The Upper Kolyma Yukaghirs, a small group of indigenous hunters in north-eastern Siberia, rarely give names to spirits and have no neatly ordered system of classification. I develop an argument that relates this to the nature of Yukaghir experience, going beyond the academically widespread view of knowledge as a matter of linguistic representations or cognition and focusing instead on the way things occur in the flux of people’s everyday activities. Moreover, drawing on recent findings within cognitive science, which show that concepts can and do exist independently of language, and that dreaming shares basic cognitive structures and processes with waking life, I suggest that it is possible that children, before they learn to talk, could develop prototypical concepts of spirits through dream experiences. In this case, language would not be essential for conceptual thought about spiritual beings.

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