Modeling the life and death of competing languages from a physical and mathematical perspective
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Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Abstract
Recent contributions address the problem of language coexistence as that of two species competing
to aggregate speakers, thus focusing on the dynamics of linguistic traits across populations.
They draw inspiration from physics and biology and share some underlying ideas - e. g. the search
for minimal schemes to explain complex situations or the notion that languages are extant entities
in a societal context and, accordingly, that objective, mathematical laws emerge driving the
aforementioned dynamics. Di erent proposals pay attention to distinct aspects of such systems:
Some of them emphasize the distribution of the population in geographical space, others research
exhaustively the role of bilinguals in idealized situations (e. g. isolated populations), and yet
others rely extremely on equations taken unchanged from physics or biology and whose parameters
bear actual geometrical meaning. Despite the sources of these models - so unrelated to linguistics
- sound results begin to surface that establish conditions and make testable predictions regarding
language survival within populations of speakers, with a decisive role reserved to bilingualism. Here
we review the most recent works and their interesting outcomes stressing their physical theoretical
basis, and discuss the relevance and meaning of the abstract mathematical ndings for real-life
situations
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Seoane LF and Mira J. Modeling the life and death of competing languages from a physical and mathematical perspective. In Bilingualism and Minority Languages in Europe: Current trends and developments (F. Lauchlan, M. C. Para ta Couto, eds.), pp.70-93 (ISBN: 978-1-4438-1943-5). Cambridge Scholars Press (2017).
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© 2017 Cambridge Scholars Publishing








