15 The Re ation of Habitua Thought and Behavior to Language Benjamin Lee Whorf the group.. ..We see and hear and otherwise experience very largely as we do e language habits of our community predispose certain choices of ~nterpretation. Edward Sapir (1949:162) eings do not live in the objective world alone, nor alone in the world of social ordinarily understood, but are very much at the mercy of the particular language become the medium of expression for thkir society. It is quite an illusion to imagine sts to reality essentially without the use of language and that language is merely means of solving specificproblems of communication or reflection. The fact of er is that the "real world" is to a large extent unconsciously built up on the language 11probably be general assent to the proposition that an accepted pattern of rds is often prior to certain lines of thinking and forms of behavior, but he ts often sees in such a statement nothing more than a platitudinous of the hypnotic power of philosophical and learned terminology on between language, culture, and psychology, and succinctly expressed in ductory quotation. It is not so much in these special uses of language as in ?he one hand or of catchwords, slogans, and rallying cries on the other. To see egdy thus far is to miss the point of one of the important interconnections which stant ways of arranging data and its most ordinary everyday analysis of ena that we need to recognizethe influenceit has on other activities, cultural The Name of the Situation as Affecting Behavior touch with an aspect of this problem before I had studied under Dr. Sapir, a field usually considered remote from linguistics. It was in the course of my conditions, such as defective wiring, presence or laclc of air spaces flues and woodwork, etc., and the results were presented in these ter undertakenwith no thought that any other significanceswould or c ~~t in duecourse it became evident that not only a physical situatio the meaning of that situation to people, was sometimes a factor, thr of the people, in the start of the fire. And this factor of meaning was pies, which could be greatly myltiplied, will suffice to show how the sin line of behavior is often dven by the analogies of the linguistic which the situation is spoken of, and by which to some degree it is sified, and allotted its place in that world which is "to a large extent This when heated in a fire decomposes, forming inflammable acetone. * airmlatical Patterns as Interpretations of Experience tolerated fire close to the covering was induced by use of the me ' rial in the above examples is limited to single words, phrases, and Herethe linguisticinfluence is more complex; it is due to the metaphoric ing (of which more later) of "cause" as contact or the spatial luxta athings~y- to analyzing the situation as ccon"versus "off" the fire. In stage when the fire was the main factor had passed; the ov fire to the building. in our own language in order to examine the exotic language. Or to our own. ARENESS of time and cyclicity does contain something immediate and evident, especially in the light of Sapir's lectures on Navaho, that the d the LANGUAGE was far from complete. I laew for example the m s patterned on the OUTER world. It is this that reflects our linguistic usage. formation of plurals, but not how to use plurals. It was evident that t makes no distinction between numbers counted on discrete entities and of plural in Hopi was not the same thing as in English, French, or Ge t instead ordinals used with singulars. Such an expression as "ten days" .The equivalent statement is an operational one that reaches one day by a unt. "They stayed ten days" becomes "they stayed until the eleventh day" eft after the tenth day." "Ten days is greater than nine days" becomes "the is later than the ninth." Our "leng!h of time" is not regarded as a length relation between two events in lateness. Instead of our linguistically objectification of that datum of consciousness we call "time," the Hopi t is the essence of time. Nouns of Physical Quantity in SAE and Hopi two lcinds of nouns denoting physical things: individual nouns, and mass When I began the study, the problem was by no means so clearly form ,"water, milk, wood, granite, sand, flour, meat." Individual nouns denote I had little notion that the answers would turn out as they did. h definite outlines: "a tree, a stick, a man, a hill." Mass nouns denote eous continua without implied boundaries. The distinction is marked by form; e.g., mass nouns laclc plurals,3 in English drop articles, and in French Plurality and Numeration in SAE and Hopi partitive article du, de la, des. The distinction is more widespread in than in the observable appearance of things. Rather few natural occur- ent themselves as unbounded extents; "air" of course, and often "water, sand, rock, dirt, grass." We do not encounter "butter, meat, cloth, iron, his is partly done by names of body-types: "sticlc of wood, piece of cloth, from the fact that our language confuses the two different situations, has BENJAMIN LEE WHORF or consists of such-and-such a quantity of "time." contents. Hence the "lumps, chunks, bloclts, pieces," etc., seem to con " or "while morning-phase is occurring." These "temporals" are not used physical thing by a binomial that splits the reference into a formless item P s or objects, or at all like nouns. One does not say "it's a hot summer" or and both singular and plural forms. Nouns translating most nearly our Temporal Forms of Verbs in SAE and Hopi for nor analogies on which to build the concept of existence as a duali item and form. It deals with formlessnessthrough other symbols than Phases of Cycles in SAE and Hopi Such terms as "summer, winter, September, morning, noon, sunset" are nouns, and have little formal linguistic difference from other nouns. They SubjectSor objects, and we say "at sunset" or "in winter" just as we say "at a foresight, all are in consciousness together - one is not "yet to be" nor r "once but no more." Where real time comes in is that all this in conscious- phase similar to an earlier phase in that ever-later-becoming duration. "getting later," changing certain relations in an irreversible manner. In this imagination can such a cyclic phase be set beside another and another in th g" or "durating" there seems to me to be a paramount contrast between the latest instant at the focus of attention and the rest -the earlier. Languages by e get along well with two tenselilce forms answering to this paramount of "later" to "earlier." We can of course CONTRAST AND CONTEMPLATE IN T a system of past, present, future, in the objectified configuration of points ne. This is what our general objectification tendency leads us to do and our nouns. So for the phase nouns we have made a formless item, "time." We hav 370 BENJAMIN LEE WHORF is no space involved is NOT THERE - as if on it had been laid the taboo major grammatical patterns do not, as with us, provide analogies for an huge class of words, denotes only intensity, tendency, duration, and tendency "during duration." As yet we have noted nothing to indica The function of the tensors is to express intensities, "strengths," and event is sooner or later than another when both are REPORTED.But nee continue or vary, their rate of change; so that the broad concept of not arise until we have two verbs: i.e. two clauses. In that case the "mo when considered as necessarily always varying and/or continuing, includes ncy and duration. Tensors convey distinctions of degree, rate, constancy, to the terms of real space and movement that to us "mean the Hopi patterns; although this does not in the least hinder the verb forms patterns from being closely adjusted to the pertinent realities of actual situ o, while Hopi in its nouns seems highly concrete, here in the tensors it abstract almost beyond our power to follow. Duration, Intensity, and Tendency in SAE and Hopi Habitual Thought in SAE and Hopi t contrasts that appear to stem from the linguisticdifferencesalready noted. express duration by "long, short, great, much, quick, slow," etc.; intensity great, much, heavy, light, high, low, sharp, faint,",etc.; tendency by "more, grow, turn, get, approach, go, come, rise, fall, stop, smooth, even, rapid, sl so on through an almost inexhaustible list of metaphors that we hardly rec e-and-take between language and the culture as a whole, wherein is a vast that is not linguistic but yet shows the shaping influence of language. In is "thought world" is the microcosm that each man carries about within by which he measures and understands what he can of the macrocosm. ING - imaginativelyspatializing qualities and potentials that are quite nons far as any spatially perceptive senses can tell us). Noun-meaning (withus) from physical bodies to referents of far other sort. Since physical bodies outlines in PERCEIVED SPACE are denoted by size and shape terms and rec cardinal numbers and plurals, these patterns of denotation and reckoning simplestnonspatial situationwithout constant resort to physical metaphors. I' ly if perceptible physical experience, events are expressed mainly as outlines, 372 BENJAMIN LEE WHORF good will, to further desired results. Hopi attitudes stress the power of thought. With their "microcosm" it is utterly natural that they should. thought are the earliest, and therefore the most important, most critical ,stage of preparing. Moreover, to the Hopi, one's desires and thoughts "stuff" has for us. WE tend to believe that our bodies can stop up this energy, from affecting other things until we will our BODIES to overt action. But Habitual Behavior Features of Hopi Culture be so only because we have our own linguistic basis for a theory that items like "matter" are things in themselves, malleable only by similar Our behavior, and that of Hopi, can be seen to be coordinated in ore matter, and hence insulated from the powers of life and thought. unnatural to think that thought contacts everything and pervades the ORDINALS. This is not the pattern of counting a number of different men day-cyclicity as to severalmen ("several days"), which is what WE tend to aginary, we tuck the thought-of actually existing rosebush, which may be with the future - by working within a present situation which is expecte r he himself) traffics with the actual rosebush - or more likely, corn plant rehearsing, getting ready, introductory formalities, preparing of specialfoo ceremonies,prayer sticks, ritual smoking, etc. The prayer pipe is regarded as of these to a degree that may seem overelaborate to us), intensive sustained to "concentrating" (so said my informant). Its name, 1zn'ttun7zpi, means activity like running, racing, dancing, which is thought to increase the in development of events (suchas growth of crops),mimetic and other magic, tions based on esoteric theory involving perhaps occult instruments lik al affair, be it a job of work, hunt, race, or ceremony, but direct their thought "the prepared" or the "in preparation."9 in discoveringmysteries of the Cosmos, such as relativity,is the wrong one. answer is: Newtonian space, time, and matter are no intuitions. They are om culture and language. That is where Newton got them. ectifiedview of time is, however, favorable to historicity and to everything cultural activities. with the keeping of records, while the Hopi view is unfavorable form from what memory or record reports, there is less incentive to a motion but a "getting later" of everything that bas ever been don c: , yesterday, not as "another day," i.e. like an entirely different person. joined with that of thought-power and with traits of general Pue ds, diaries, booltlteeping, accounting, mathematics stimulated by account- expressed in the theory of the Hopi ceremonial dance for further crops, as well as in its short, piston-like tread, repeated thousands o after hour. Some Impressesof Linguistic Habit in Western Civilizatio It is harder to do justice in few words to the linguistically conditioned fea we conceiveour objectified time as extending in the future in the same way ends in the past, so we set down our estimates of the future in the same From the form-plus-substance dichotomy the philosophical views m ally characteristic of the "Western world" have derived huge support. discovered this much), but because they must be talked about in what a patterns and the fitting of our behavior to the temporal order are what they 376 BENJAMINLEE WHORF RELATIONOF THOUGHT AND BEHAVIORTO LANGUAGE there is something in the Cosmos that is not in accord with the co formed in mounting the spiral. It is trying to frame a NEW LANGUA adjust itself to a wider universe. It is clear how the emphasis on "saving time" which goes with all t e organized. Nonspatial consciousness is a realm chiefly of thought, shows itself a great deal in our behavior. SOUND. Spatial consciousness is a realm of light, color, sight, and Still another behavioral effect is that the character of monotony resents shapes and dimensions. Our metaphorical system, by naming possessed by our image of time as an evenly scaled limitless tape measu eriencesafter spatial ones, imputes to sounds, smells, tastes, emotions, us to behave as if that monotony were more true of events than it really qualities like the colors, luminosities, shapes, angles, textures, and helps to routinize us. We tend to select and favor whatever bears out energy does well in routine performance, and it is along routine lines th disastrous to a society as small, isolated, and precariously poised as the is, or rather once was. Historical Implications such a network of language, culture, and behavior come about histori- the nonspatial references that our language handles by metaphors ch was first: the language patterns or the cultural norms? In main they n up together, constantly influencing each other. But in this partnership of the language is the factor that limits free plasticity and rigidifies f development in the more autocratic way. This is so because a language But, if a language refers to nonspatials without implying a spatial ,not just an assemblage of norms. Large systematic outlines can change to reference is not made any clearer by gesture. The Hopi gesture very li really new only very slowly, while many other cultural innovations are not at all in the sense we understand as gesture. comparative quickness. Language thus represents the mass mind; it is It would seem as if kinesthesia, or the sensing of muscular mo inventions and innovations, but affected little and slowly, whereas TO arising before language, should be made more highly conscious by d innovators it legislates with the decree immediate. rather than symbolism or ceremonial, and our music is greatly influe dance forms. Our sports are strongly imbued with this element of th motion." Hopi races and games seem to emphasize rather the virtues 0 378 BENJAMINLEE WHORF would be either very difficult to express or impossible and devoid of er the Hopi conception, and would be replaced by operational con- "matter" is the physical subtype of "substance" or ccstuff,''which is as the formless extensional item that must be joined with form before formless extensional items; existence may or may not have form, but has, with or without form, is intensity and duration, these being within Hopi from a root meaning think or remember. Or conside and the partnership of mathematics and science, all cooperated to brin with extraneous notions. ever-needed blessing, rain - these things interacted with Hopi linguistic mployed and various behavioral reactions and also the shapes talcen by mold them, to be molded again by them, and so little by little to sha world-outlook. or sociological description as by examining the culture and the language and only when the two have been together historically for a considerable a whole in which concatenations that run across these departmental lines xpected to exist, and, if they do exist, eventuallyto be discoverable by study. ave plenty of evidence that this is not the case. Consider only the Hopi and the Ute, with such a space, and employed as an intellectual tool accordingly. Hopi "d ages that on the overt morphological and lexical level are as similar as, say, English and seems to be inconceivable in terms of space or motion, being the mode i an. The idea of "correlation" between language and culture, in the generally accepted of correlation, is certainly a mistaken one. BENJAMIN LEE WHORF RELATION OF THOUGHT AND BEHAVIOR will appear in the course of this paper. a It is no exception to this rule of lacking a plural that a mass noun may someti lexeme with an individual noun that of course has a plural; e.g., "stone" (no . (1949). The Status of Linguistics as a Science. In (pl. "stones"). The plural form denoting varieties, e.g., "wines" is of course a izgs of Edzuard Snpir iit Lnizgtmge, Glltt~reand Perso; les: University of California Press. another sort of imaginary aggregates, which will have to be omitted from this pa Hopi has two words for water quantities; ka.yi and paha. The difference is someth between "stone" and "rock" in English, pnha implying greater size and "wildnes water, whether or not outdoors or in nature, is pa.ha; so is "moisture." But, unlike ' "rock," the difference is essential, not pertaining to a connotative margin, and hardly ever be interchanged. To be sure, there are a few minor differences from other nouns, in English for ins use of the articles. "Year" and certain combinations of "year" with name of season, rarely season nam can occur with a locative morpheme "at," but this is exceptional. It appears like detritus of an earlier different patterning, or the effect of English analogy, or both. The expective and reportive assertions contrast according to the "paramount rela expective expresses anticipation existing EARLIER than objective fact, and coinc objective fact LATER than the status quo of the speaker, this status quo, includ' subsum~nationof the past therein, being expressed by the reportive. Our notio seems to represent at once the earlier (anticipation) and the later (afterwards, what w as Hopi shows. This paradox may hint of how elusive the mystery of real time is, a artificially it is expressed by a linear relation of past-present-future. One such trace is that the tensor "long in duration," while quite different from the a "long" of space, seems to contain the same root as the adjective "large" of space. An that "somewhere" of space used with certain tensors means "at some indefinite time." however this is not the case and it is only the tensor that gives the time element, "somewhere" still refers to space and that under these conditions indefinite space means general applicability, regardless of either time or space. Another trace is that in the tem (cycle word) "afternoon" the element meaning "after" is derived from the verb "to sep There are other such traces, but they are few and exceptional, and obviously not like o spatial metaphorizing. The Hopi verbs of preparing naturally do not correspond neatly to our "prepare"; s izn'ttuniti could also be rendered "the practiced-upon, the tried-for," and otherwise. Anthropology, no. 15, 1937), especially the reference to the announcement of a rab and on p. 30, description of the activities in connection with the cleaning of Toreva results already obtained and the continued flow of the spring. This notion of storing up power, which seems implied by much Hopi behavior, has an ana in physics: acceleration. It might be said that the linguistic background of Hopi thought equ' it to recognize naturally that force manifests not as motion or velocity, but as cumulation acceleration. Our linguistic background tends to hinder in us this same recognition, for havi legitimately conceived force to be that which produces change, we then think of change our linguistic metaphorical analog, motion, instead of by a pure motionless changingn concept, i.e. accumulation or acceleration. Hence it comes to our nai've feeling as a shoclc find from physical experiments that it is not possible to define force by motion, that motio and speed, as also "being at rest," are wholly relative, and that force can be measured only b acceleration. Here belong "Newtonian" and "Euclidean" space, etc. LANGUAGE G. Mandelba~ :ty ( p p 160-6). (ed.1, rkeley Selected and Los