Glad you see things the same way.Nilesh Oak wrote:Thanks Arjun ji for recognizing the problem.... all these arugments/counter arugments while keeping the original question open...and letting one walk away without being held responsible for making 'casual and careless remarks' which are never backed. Some forum members have successfully took the discussion to varoius tangents, and in all obejectivity, I commend them for their, intentional or otherwise, successful plan.
In fact, the irony is that after pages and pages of back-on-forth arguments on low-level linguistics issues - NONE of the original higher-level questions have been refuted. I am including an earlier post below, where I had detailed some of these questions. Shiv and RajeshA ji have also raised others which went unanswered. ManishH ji is definitely not going to address them - he knows which battles are winnable and which ones to run away from.
Arjun wrote:Shiv, The problem-areas with comparative linguistics as I see them are-
1. Reconstruction of phonetics of dead languages from bilingual inscriptions containing scripts that are logo-graphic or logo-syllabic. This is something you've rightly unearthed - Akkadian, Hittite phonetic reconstructions would fall under this rubric
2. Many comparative linguistic methodologies- such as glottochronology and lexicostatistics stand discredited even within the linguist community
3. The most commonly used technique in comparative linguistics - the 'comparative method' for reconstruction is dependent on the neo-grammarian position that 'sound laws have no exceptions'. Unfortunately, even this has been proved wrong in the case of Maltese Guttarals.
4. Another problem with reconstruction methodology: Reconstructed Proto-Greek has some features that should make it precede Mycenaean Greek in evolution, but then Mycenaean seems not to have participated in linguistic innovations of Proto-Greek. That's a contradiction that's not been resolved.
5. Identification of cognates, 'false cognates', substrates and the like seems to be rather arbitrary. In fact, there are differences between the Nostratic camp and PIE camp on rules for cognates.
6. Comparative linguistics can be very clearly seen to be a continual 'curve-fitting' exercise. They thought they had everything figured out into neat categories - the discovery of Tocharian and Hittite turned things upside down. And now they have modified their theories again to fit the latest data...Now of course this is no different from any other science, but the key issue is that reconstruction is not 'falsifiable' using experiments unless more 'dead' languages are discovered. So 'reconstruction' of dead languages is very much a questionable science.
7. The tree model of language evolution, where proto-languages are surmised to be collapsible to a particular point in space and time in the past - is now widely regarded as an outdated concept by most linguists.