The Museum of Indian Language_B.Arch_Thesis2019

Page 19

1.4 Development of Scripts If the traditional arts are the best ways to grow then why were these systematic languages invented? Yuval Noah Harari in his book ‘Sapiens: A brief history of mankind’ describes the three primary reasons for humans to invent language. Firstly, the capacity of a human brain is limited; there is only so much information that a person can remember, even one who has an extraordinary memory. (For example, a doctor might be able to name all the bones in a human body but not the details of all the cases he has handled in the last say fifty years of his career.) Secondly, each human has a limited lifespan, they eventually die, and brains die with them. It is definitely possible to pass on information however, there is a high chance of the information being altered or bits of it being lost after a few transfers, as explained previously using the example of Ramayana. The third limitation of the human brain is its ability to store and process only certain types of information. (Hunter-gatherers only used to remember what was essential for survival, for example which fruits were poisonous, in which area they were found or what tree gives which fruit at a particular time of the year and the whereabouts of dangerous wild animals. What they did not need to remember is the exact number of fruits each tree gives every blooming season, and they didn’t need to keep track of the exact number of dangerous animals in each type every few months.) This is the kind of information the brain is not used to storing and processing – numbers.

Figure 1.4.1 Earliest Scripts 19


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.