"The Analytical Language of John Wilkins" | |
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First edition of Otras Inquisiciones (1937-1952), published by Sur (Buenos Aires) in 1952
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Author | Jorge Luis Borges |
Original title | "El idioma analitico de John Wilkins" |
Genre(s) | Criticism |
Published in | Otras Inquisiciones (1937-1952) |
Publication type | Anthology |
Publisher | Sur |
Publication date | 1952 |
"The Analytical Language of John Wilkins" (Spanish: El idioma analitico de John Wilkins) is a short essay by Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges originally published in Otras Inquisiciones (1937–1952). It is a critique of the English natural philosopher and writer John Wilkins's proposal for a universal language and of the representational capacity of language generally. In it, Borges imagines a bizarre and whimsical (and fictional) Chinese taxonomy later quoted by Michel Foucault, David Byrne, and others.
Borges begins by noting John Wilkins's absence from the 14th edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica and makes the case for Wilkins' significance, highlighting in particular the universal language scheme detailed in his An Essay towards a Real Character and a Philosophical Language (1668). Wilkins's system decomposes the entire universe of "things and notions" into successively smaller divisions and subdivisions, assigning at each step of this decomposition a syllable, consonant, or vowel. Wilkins intended for these conceptual building blocks to be recombined to represent anything on earth or in heaven. The basic example Borges gives is "de, which means an element; deb, the first of the elements, fire; deba, a part of the element of fire, a flame."
Examining this and other second-hand examples from Wilkins's scheme—