The Holographic Principle: Typological analysis using lower dimensions
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/26872Date
2018Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
A moderately complex factorial typology may consist of tens or hundreds of languages which can opaquely
encode linguistically salient categories and generalizations. We propose in this paper that these complex
typologies can be decomposed and understood using what we call the holographic principle: a large
typology can be projected onto simplified versions of itself which can be completely understood using
Property Theory (Alber & Prince 2016). The simplified versions can then be re-incorporated into the
original in such a way that the properties of the simple are maintained and provide a framework for
analyzing the full system.
In this paper, we demonstrate this technique using two systems, a basic stringency system (BSS), and a
coda stringency system (CSS). We show how a complete analysis of BSS, using Property Theory, provides
fundamental insights into the more complicated CSS which BSS is a simplification of. A property analysis
is a set of properties that divide the languages of the typology in such a way that each language and its
grammar can be identified uniquely by its property values. Such an analysis identifies the crucial rankings
among constraints that distinguish all grammars of the typology so that languages that share property
values share extensional traits.
Publisher
Linguistic Society of AmericaCitation
Merchant N, Krämer M. The Holographic Principle: Typological analysis using lower dimensions. Proceedings of the Annual Meetings on Phonology. 2018Metadata
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Copyright 2018 The Author(s)