
doi: 10.2139/ssrn.3097220
handle: 10419/202597
This research explores the geographical origins of the coevolution of cultural and linguistic traits in the course of human history, relating the geographical roots of long-term orientation to the structure of the future tense, the agricultural determinants of gender bias to the presence of sex-based grammatical gender, and the ecological origins of hierarchical orientation to the existence of politeness distinctions. The study advances the hypothesis and establishes empirically that: (i) variations in geographical characteristics that were conducive to higher natural return to agricultural investment contributed to the existing cross-language variations in the structure of the future tense, (ii) the agricultural determinants of gender gap in agricultural productivity fostered the existence of sex-based grammatical gender, and (iii) the ecological origins of hierarchical societies triggered the emergence of politeness distinctions.
Welt, Long-Term Orientation, Grammatical Gender, Hierarchy, Linguistik, Cultural Evolution, Entwicklung, Evolutionsökonomik, Räumliche Verteilung, Comparative Development, J16, ddc:330, Language Structure, Future Tense, Sozialer Wandel, Politeness Distinctions, Agrargeographie, Emergence of States, Ernteertrag, Gender Bias, Agrargeschichte, Z10, Z13, D01, D03
Welt, Long-Term Orientation, Grammatical Gender, Hierarchy, Linguistik, Cultural Evolution, Entwicklung, Evolutionsökonomik, Räumliche Verteilung, Comparative Development, J16, ddc:330, Language Structure, Future Tense, Sozialer Wandel, Politeness Distinctions, Agrargeographie, Emergence of States, Ernteertrag, Gender Bias, Agrargeschichte, Z10, Z13, D01, D03
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