isaiahudotong.eth
@isaiah
Some languages tell time through the magnitude of the moment
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Nat Emodi
@emodi
say more
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isaiahudotong.eth
@isaiah
languages use specific vocabulary for interpreting the world around us. And with time, there are two general categories with which this is done.
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isaiahudotong.eth
@isaiah
There is time in terms distance, as in crossing an area, and time in terms of volume as in a space being filled.
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isaiahudotong.eth
@isaiah
English uses physical distances to express a measure of time. We say βa short breakβ or βa long movie.β Describing the passage of time is a measurable distance. Whereas in languages like Greek and Spanish, time is marked with terms that refer to volume. The translation would be: "a small break" or "a big movie
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isaiahudotong.eth
@isaiah
A study published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology sought to test whether people who think about time with distance or volume measurements have a better sense of how much time has passed.
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isaiahudotong.eth
@isaiah
To measure this, they had one group watch a line grow across a screen and a 2nd group watch a container being filled, the first, a measure of time as distance and the second, a measure of time as volume.
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isaiahudotong.eth
@isaiah
The results showed that subjects were equally matched when playing to their linguistic strengths. When the measurement was conducted in the same dimension as their language. So indeed some languages do interpret time through the magnitude of the moment
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