In
historical linguistics
Historical linguistics, also known as diachronic linguistics, is the scientific study of how languages change over time. It seeks to understand the nature and causes of linguistic change and to trace the evolution of languages. Historical li ...
, the uniformitarian principle is the assumption that processes of
language change
Language change is the process of alteration in the features of a single language, or of languages in general, over time. It is studied in several subfields of linguistics: historical linguistics, sociolinguistics, and evolutionary linguistic ...
that can be observed today also operated in the past.
Peter Trudgill
Peter Trudgill, ( ; born 7 November 1943) is an English sociolinguist, academic and author.
Biography
Trudgill was born in Norwich, England, and grew up in the area of Thorpe St Andrew. He attended the City of Norwich School from 1955. T ...
calls the uniformitarian principle "one of the fundamental bases of modern historical linguistics," which he characterizes, other things being equal, as the principle "that knowledge of processes that operated in the past can be inferred by observing ongoing processes in the present." It is the linguistic adaptation of a widespread principle in the sciences, there usually known as
uniformitarianism
Uniformitarianism, also known as the Doctrine of Uniformity or the Uniformitarian Principle, is the assumption that the same natural laws and processes that operate in our present-day scientific observations have always operated in the universe in ...
.
Application in linguistics
In linguistics,
Uriel Weinreich
Uriel Weinreich (, ; May 23, 1926 – March 30, 1967) was a Jewish–American linguist.
Life
Uriel Weinreich was born in Wilno, Poland (since 1945, Vilnius, Lithuania), the first child of linguist Max Weinreich () and Regina Szabad, to a fam ...
,
William Labov
William David Labov ( ; December4, 1927December17, 2024) was an American linguist widely regarded as the founder of the discipline of variationist sociolinguistics. He has been described as "an enormously original and influential figure who has ...
and
Marvin Herzog
Marvin (Mikhl) I. Herzog (September 13, 1927 – June 28, 2013) was a Yiddish language Professor at Columbia University.
Biography
Herzog received his Ph.D. from Columbia under Uriel Weinreich.
In 1967, he became the director, and then the edit ...
appear to have been the first to expressly elaborate, in the 1960s, on a hitherto tacit assumption of equivalent processes being at play in the present time as in the past. They did not do so without precedent, however, as historical and comparative linguistics, from the late 18th century on, seem to have adopted such process-oriented thinking.
Hermann Paul
Hermann Otto Theodor Paul (August 7, 1846, Salbke – December 29, 1921, Munich) was a German philologist, linguist and lexicographer.
Biography
He studied at Berlin and Leipzig, and in 1874 became professor of German language and literature in ...
, for instance, assumed what he the called "psychological" principles in the 1860s as underlying language change.
William Labov's "Principles of Language Change, Part 1: Internal Factors," from 1994, gives probably the most coherent account to date by expressly linking the Uniformitarian Principle to geographical uniformitarianism and expressing the parallels. Around the same time
William Dwight Whitney
William Dwight Whitney (February 9, 1827June 7, 1894) was an American linguist, philologist, and lexicographer known for his work on Sanskrit grammar and Vedic philology as well as his influential view of language as a social institution. He was ...
wrote of "So far back as we can trace the history of language, the forces which have been efficient in producing its changes ... have been the same". Labov summarizes the state-of-the-art: "Today, it would seem that linguistics has accepted the uniformitarian principle and its consequences, as geology, biology, and other historical sciences have done."
Sociolinguistics and language varieties
The Uniformitarian Principle is often applied in sociolinguistics.
J. K. Chambers mentions it as a benchmark in his ''Sociolinguistic Theory,'' which draws on Labov's summary. Recently, the Uniformitarian Principle has been revoked to alert scholars to the "way English linguists construe
pluricentricity" as "the anti-thesis of its treatment by a substantial number of German linguists" today. In ''Pluricentricity Debate,'' Dollinger argues that "the unity of cross-linguistic dialectology" is "threatened" by (German) disregard for the Uniformitarian Hypothesis: if multiple standards in English are allowed and the social constraints are similar in other languages, the Uniformitarian Hypothesis demands that sociolinguists allow for multiple standards in theses contexts too, e.g.
Austrian Standard German,
German Standard German and
Swiss Standard German
Swiss Standard German (SSG; ), or Swiss High German ( or ; ), referred to by the Swiss as , or , is the written form of one (German language, German) of four languages of Switzerland, national languages in Switzerland, besides French language, Fr ...
.
References
{{reflist
Evolution of language