Musk said:
well theres 32 countries or so in europe and how many international borders to you think a country has, look at germany
http://www.mapsofworld.com/germany/germany-map.jpg
it has 9 international borders that seems like commone sense
well their expected to know english and their native language, australia is tell pretty much islolated from everything else even the information age has changed alot so i dont see the need
Err... Indonesia? And with new transport technologies developed in the last century the rest of Asia has become a fairly close neighbour as well. Far closer than a brief glance at a map would indicate.
It also should be blatantly obvious that you don't need to be next to a country to have extensive interaction - there is a large involvement between US and Aust. for example and we're not exactly neighbours.
HotShot said:
I srs dont understand why you need to know a second language. YOu can survive easily in any other country if you know english. But can you survive in another country if you knew only Japanese? You wouldnt last a minute in Russia.
You can't survive anywhere if you know English - leave the tourist districts in many countries and you're screwed. Your second statement about knowing only Japanese only supports my statement - you can't survive just anywhere with a single language - knowing more languages helps to remedy that.
zimmerman said:
I disagree. The cultural differences that are worth preserving and that make the world interesting are not contained within languages. It is worth celebrating different culture, art, food, music, religion ect. But language. It's just a way of communicating these things. It's a means to an ends. Different languages just make life difficult. I think it would make the world a better place if we all spoke the one language. Language is evolving anyway. The English we speak now is almost indistinguishable from that of 1000 years ago. It seems a natural trend that as the channels of communication around the world become more effective the world's language will become more homogeneous. Why would we want to fight this process?
While differences are not confined within language, some of it is indeed contained within language if only in the concepts it articulates, for example there are languages that deal with time in a completely different fashion. If we shifted that to english, that would be completely lost since English could never articulate the concept and thus it would die.
Language is also an aid to accessing other cultural aspects as it allows you to interact with the people, texts and places in a manner similar to those who are native to that language. Those channels of communication you mention would also be far more effective if we all spoke multiple languages.
HotShot said:
Not that note all languages have similarites especially English which is derived from other languages. So if you know English you can pretty much understand any other language, even if you dont know english you can still understand what is going on.
No, no you can't. Try listening to some people talk in Japanese, you will have no luck in all in deciphering details.
If you want to work elsewhere you shouldnt need to learn language - just rock up there and live there for few years and you will learn automatically. Just by observation rather than rocking up to classes. This isnt the way to learn a language.
In the time it would take you to pick up the language you wouldn't be able to make a living - every skill and qualification you possess would be rendered obselete by the fact that you cannot communicate, at all. You might be able to get around this with prior knowledge of the language which would allow you to adapt and learn much quicker, without that problematic period.
zimmerman said:
People seem to have a desire to hang on to old traditions and to fear change and globalisation. It's not the death of culture, it's just a new and different culture emerging. This is a positive and inevitable consequence of human civilization. Don't try to fight it Tulipa.
How is change innately positive? That view is as foolish as someone who believes something is innately worthwhile because it is traditional.
The obliteration of identity is something that occurs when culture dies - why should we embrace that obliteration when these identities do not inherently harm us?
HotShot said:
But trust me, people do understand what you mean, they eventually understand. If you want water, you go ask them in english, if they cant understand you use gestures -then say ah 'water' in their language. Then you know the word of water.
How do you think you learnt to speak english? Since you were baby? How do you think that people around you, your parents understood what you were talking about? This is fundamentally how people learn languages.
So if I'm trying to work as an accountant, lawyer, nurse, doctor, engineer or any occupation - even a newsagent cashier .. I can just wave my hands and make gestures till the person I am with understands what I'm saying ... right?
When we were learning to speak English as babies, we were reliant on our parents to obtain things for us. I don't think most adults going overseas will have the same luxury.