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NONVERBAL WORLD

The Good Place Apart from Words

I am not yet so lost in lexicography as to forget that words are the daughters of the earth. . . . --Samuel Johnson (Dictionary)

Some natural tears they dropped, but wiped them soon;
The world was all before them, where to choose
Their place of rest, and Providence their guide.
They, hand in hand, with wandering steps and slow,
Through Eden took their solitary way
. --John Milton (Paradise Lost, Book XII; 1667)


Concept
. 1. A domain of ancient social, emotional, and cognitive signs, established millions of years before the advent of speech. 2. A usually hidden sensory dimension apart from that which is defined by words. 3. An often unconscious medium, between reflex and reason, governed by the oldest parts of our vertebrate brain (see NONVERBAL BRAIN).

Good place. Nonverbal World is a landscape without language, billboards, or signposts, a realm without writing or symbols of any kind. It is a place where information consists of colors, shapes, aromas, and natural sounds--untouched by narration. This is the unspoken world we seek on mountaintops and island retreats: the good place apart from words.

Usage: We reside in a world of words, but make many of our most important decisions about life and living as if we had never left Nonverbal World. 1. We do not need words to define a kiss, decode an Armani suit, or decipher new car smell; these depend on ancient signals from the wordless past. 2. Even technical knowledge is transmitted through nonverbal apprenticeships, in which we watch and do rather than read a manual. 3. We choose vehicles, homes, and mates largely on nonverbal grounds, and select wardrobes based on clothing's look and feel. 4. Many scientists (the most notable being Albert Einstein) think in visual, spatial, and physical images rather than in mathematical terms and words. (N.B.: That theoretical physicist, Stephen Hawking used an arboreal term to picture the cosmos--affirming that the universe "could have different branches"--is a tribute to his very visual primate brain.)

Literature. "He went from the fields into a thick woods, as if resolved to bury himself. He wished to get out of hearing of the crackling shots which were to him like voices." --Stephen Crane (The Red Badge of Courage)

Origin. Nonverbal World originated 3.5 billion years ago with the earliest known life forms, blue-green algae (cyanobacteria), living in shallow-water communities known as stromatolites. Voiceless, eyeless, unable to touch or hear, the first residents of Nonverbal World communicated chemically through the medium of the molecule (see AROMA CUE).

Present day. Today, Nonverbal World is the hidden place off the written transcript, where meaning lies not in vocabulary but in unspoken signals and cues. As anthropologists explore alien cultures and archaeologists unearth the past, we may seek our roots in a paleontology of gesture. Through spinal cord paleocircuits and cranial nerves, gestures recite an ancient wisdom which mocern languages and literature only fumble to explain.

Observations. 1. To view Nonverbal World on TV, mute the sound so gestures and body movements become clearer. 2. To hear emotions on the phone, listen with your left ear (the right brain responds more acutely to feelings and moods). 3. To feel the smoothness of silk, flannel, or flesh, touch with your left hand (the right sensory strip is more emotional than the left).

Evolution I. For a.half-billion years, our vertebrate ancestors defined reality without uttering a phrase. Early residents of Nonverbal World dealt with each other and with great issues of the day apart from linguistic labels, concepts, or names. Though speechless, Nonverbal World was filled with whispering winds, flowing waters, rhetorical thunder, and the calls of wild things. It bustled with movement, percolated with aromas, and bristled with feathers and fur. Constant comment was heard eons before words arrived on the scene.

Evolution II. Late in Nonverbal World's prehistory, the first words were spoken, marking the birth of a new conceptual order based on language. Spoken language emerged some 200,000 years ago as the dominant verbal medium of our species, Homo sapiens. But a price was paid for speaking, as words and the knowledge for which they stand estranged human beings from Nonverbal World. As ever larger areas of brain specialized for speaking and listening (see HUMAN BRAIN), attention shifted from the sensory reality our ancestors knew to a separate reality based on speech.

Evolution III. In the mind's eye, words have more meaning than that which they name. In fact, it may not be an exaggeration to say that language has taken over our conscious brain. Not only does talk stimulate the brain's largest speech areas--Broca's and Wernicke's--it excites "wide areas in the frontal and parietal lobes" (Eccles 1989:89), too, as well as the brain stem's incredible tangle of cranial nerves. Hearing, saying, or seeing a word dominates attention by neurologically engulfing our mind.

Primatology. "With regard to the vocalizations of these animals [wild baboons], it is notable that many hours of the day are spent in almost complete silence" (Hall and DeVore 1972:158).

Space. Nearing completion of their five-month mission in orbit (from March to August 2001), international-space-station residents Yuri Usachev and Jim Voss "are yearning for the smells and sounds of nature" (Anonymous 2001J).

Neuro-notes. Nonverbal World gradually came to be known as sensory nerves evolved to grasp its features. The oldest chemical and tactile senses enabled early creatures to know the landscape and to smell, feel, and "taste" each other's presence in Nonverbal World. (N.B.: A great deal of our nonverbal communication--from the colognes we buy to our footwear--is still about presence today.)

Copyright © 1998 - 2005 (David B. Givens/Center for Nonverbal Studies)