Listen "Episode 96 The Earth's language"
Episode Synopsis
We start the episode, as always, with a couple of questions: 1. What are the differences between spoken/signed language and written/printed/digital language? 2. Where are you? There's an answer to Question 2 that will be true for anyone who says it. 'I am here.' But if you write it on a piece of paper, and then leave the room, it stops being true. Does that make spoken language more genuine? Or is written language more reliable because it's more durable, less ephemeral? ('Put it in writing.') We explore questions around spoken/written language in relation to what French philosopher Jacques Derrida calls the 'metaphysics of presence'. And also in relation to a quite touching France Télécom advert from the '90s. The discussion leads to a conversation about non-human language, specifically, the language of the Earth itself. Both human language and the Earth's language are systems for structuring information. Human language is structured around the principle of selfhood, which leads us to the whimsical fancy that the separate, distinct self exists prior to the grammar that created it. The story I read in Episode 96 is 'The loneliness of the literate species'. Sign up for the Grammar for Dreamers newsletter here: jodieclark.com/newsletter Check out my course: The Grammar of Show Don't Tell: Exploring the Emotional Depths. Subscribe on Apple podcasts, Spotify or wherever you like to listen. Rate, review, tell your friends!
More episodes of the podcast Structured Visions
114 The linguistics of loss
30/10/2025
113 We are all grammatically distant
30/09/2025
112 Love language
28/08/2025
111 The linguistics of tapping
31/07/2025
110 Clap if you believe in fairies
26/06/2025
109 What makes you so special?
29/05/2025
108 Adulting, and stuff like that
30/04/2025
107 Heaven and Earth
27/03/2025
106 Prosody and peak experiences
27/02/2025
105 Given, new and the selfless know-it-all
30/01/2025
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.