Swift and the Fatal Law: The Day Saussure Visited Lagado
“Evolution is inevitable: there is no known example of a language immune from it. After a certain time, changes can always be seen to have taken place. This principle must even apply to artificial languages. Anyone who thinks he can construct a language not subject to change, which posterity must accept as it is, would be like a hen hatching a duck’s egg”. — Ferdinand de Saussure, Course in General Linguistics Introduction Among the many curious inventions described in Gulliver's Travels , few are more memorable than the linguistic reforms proposed at the Academy of Lagado. Gulliver visits a school of languages where three professors are engaged in a serious discussion about improving communication. Their solution is radical. Since words are merely names for things, why not abolish words altogether and communicate by carrying the objects themselves? The proposal has one obvious drawback. As Swift explains, a person engaged in extensive affairs would be obliged to carry a ...