What is it for?

  • 0x0001@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Not everyone does, I’ve had a lot of conversations with a lot of people on this topic.

    People’s thought processes range from monologue to dialog to narration to silence to images to raw concepts without form.

    I personally do not have a constantly running monologue, but rather have relatively short bursts of thought interspersed with long periods of silence.

    • I always find this conversation fascinating and it makes me wonder in what other ways people may experience the world differently.

      I do have a constant internal monologue. Every word I read is spoken in my mind. My thought process is, to my awareness, me talking things out in my head.

      • OceanSoap@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, I also “hear” the words in my head as I read them, and that goes for everything.

        I kinda wish I thought in shapes and colors though. While my imagination is okay, I get the feeling it’s not as… vivid or Shar as others imaginations are.

      • YashaB@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Me to. This is the first time I think about that. Everything I read or write gets spoken aloud.

        When I am hearing a book or a podcast there is silence though, because when there is someone else talking, my inner voice would interfere.

        Fascinating.

    • adam_y@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I don’t have one at all. Spent ages thinking that it was just a figure of speech, but when I found out I became fascinated by it.

      The current theory is that at some early point in our evolution we literally had a voice in our head, not unlike how some forms of schizophrenia present.

      It’s called the bicameral mind.

      https://gizmodo.com/did-everyone-3-000-years-ago-have-a-voice-in-their-head-510063135

      In my day to day life it makes little difference however, despite being an avid reader and writer I struggle tremendously to read aloud.

      I don’t know for sure but I suspect it is connected.

      • naharin@feddit.nu
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        1 year ago

        In the article they bring up many questionable aspects of this idea, which also seems to lack in scientific support.

        And so the bicameral mind remains a highly controversial idea

      • Björn Tantau@swg-empire.de
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        1 year ago

        In my day to day life it makes little difference however, despite being an avid reader and writer I struggle tremendously to read aloud.

        Thanks, I actually wanted to post that as a question. I would have thought that reading silently would be harder.

        • adam_y@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I worked as a typesetter for years. I have a rather speedy reading pace (it isn’t inate, rather through practice)… but I do wonder if not having to ‘hear’ words changes the rhythm of reading.

          I’m also fascinated if other folk perform accents in their head whilst reading? Do different characters sound different or is there one ‘voice’ that acts as a narrator?

          • Ada@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            1 year ago

            Do different characters sound different or is there one ‘voice’ that acts as a narrator?

            Neither. I think of the idea of the words, rather than hearing the words in my mind. Which is to say, though I can read a sentence and string together the words I read in my mind, the l there is no voice to those words, no gender, no accent, no volume etc.

          • Björn Tantau@swg-empire.de
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            1 year ago

            For me different characters have different voices. The narrative is either the voice of the character whose perspective is currently shown (which can lead to conflicts if I don’t know the perspective at the start) or it is how I imagine the author to sound like or my own voice.

            • adam_y@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              I won’t pretend in not a little jealous of that. I can only imagine the texture that adds to a novel. Plus, it’s like a form of creative collaboration… You are present in the text… How cool is that?

          • RiverGhost@slrpnk.net
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            1 year ago

            I do read extremely fast in my native language (Spanish). Feels like entire sentences go straight into concepts and my brain builds a whole world based on what I’m reading.

            However I started reading in a verbalized way with my second and third languages (English and Swedish) because I was completely useless at pronunciation, while reading at a high level. So I had to learn the sounds and they started invading my reading, which I sort of resent.

            But the verbalization is still very mild; faint, monotone, non-enunciated.

            Some people talked about poetry and I hadn’t considered that my absolute lack of poetry-sense could be related. People have told me about the metrics and whatnot and it really doesn’t click. I have to sort of analyze a poem and explain it to myself in prose, and I imagine that defeats the purpose of poetry?

            • adam_y@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              And there’s something else I’m interested in. When you think, do you think in a mixture of those languages? Or do you actively translate? Is it a conscious thing?

              • Hjalmar@feddit.nu
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                1 year ago

                I natively speak Swedish but I’ve studied and used English for 4-5 years so I speak English fluently and would consider myself bilingual. I can think in either English or Swedish and I can mix sentences in Swedish and English freely. But I never think in a language that’s really a combination of those languages (what we would call svengelska in Swedish).

                I’m also studying french and German but I’m not fluent in any of those languages. When using those languages (or at least German) I think in a language that’s truly a combination of that language and Swedish/English. I use words from all languages and construct sentences as I would in Swedish (reverse word order for questions, no weird German thing with adjectives at the end etc). This of course becomes a pain as soon as I have to express a thought to someone else.

          • tburkhol@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I do wonder if not having to ‘hear’ words changes the rhythm of reading.

            Hadn’t thought of this…what’s your take on poetry, especially meter-forward? Like, Robert W Service or Robert Frost, I feel would be less interesting if they didn’t have their beat.

            I don’t do voices or accents when I read. Everything is in the same ‘voice,’ which isn’t quite the same as my spoken voice. My internal voice enunciates much better and slightly lower pitch. It’s more like the voice I wish I had than the voice I do have. :)

            • adam_y@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Interesting you brought up Service… Grew up reading him as he’s from my home town.

              I do like poetry, but I’m much more inclined to concrete work, or something closer to what William Burroughs was after.

              The shape rather than the rhythm.

              Never thought of it that way. Though I still adore Service for the narrative.

              I like that your internal monologue is an idealised voice.

          • Bitrot@lemmy.sdf.org
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            1 year ago

            I am pretty sure it does. From what I’ve heard people that essentially “read out loud” inside their head tend to have a have a slower reading pace. I don’t think Anauralia is necessary to not do that, either.

          • 0ops@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            Oh yeah, often I’ll even have a specific person in mind playing the character: an actor, someone I know, etc. I often don’t even realize that I’m doing this

          • elephantium@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            if not having to ‘hear’ words changes the rhythm of reading.

            Poetry instantly comes to mind. I have a very different experience when I silently read poetry vs. reading aloud or listening to someone read it aloud, especially when the poem is written with rhythm in mind.

          • lordnikon@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            it depends on if I heard a voice of that character before for example Batman is always Kevin Conroy and the joker is always Mark Hamill. another usecase is if I listened to the audio book then start reading a text book. Ray Potter shows up alot.

      • Bitrot@lemmy.sdf.org
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        1 year ago

        Out of curiosity do you visualize in your mind? Like if I say a stapler can you conjure one?

        The people with both Aphantasia and Anauralia fascinate me.

        • Hackerman_uwu@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I’ll chuck in my answer since I’ve been asked this before too.

          I don’t “see” a stapler. I perceive a future state where the pages are stapled. This does appear visually in my mind but not a a a picture of stapled pages rather a set of symbols that incorporate the task “to staple” into the other things that I am concerned with at the point of thinking about that task.

          “Set of symbols?” Is probably your follow up question - yes, geometry or iconography that describe the path from here to that future state where that pages are stapled.

          That’s the best I can do. None of this is literally narrated in my mind, however typing this out to you each sentence is “auditioned” as I imagine I am speaking it to you.

          • Bitrot@lemmy.sdf.org
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            1 year ago

            That is fascinating! And different than I’ve heard described elsewhere by either the “non-visual” or “non-verbal” thinkers. I think I am pretty generic, when I think of a stapler I literally see a red swingline stapler floating in a void like in a 3d modeling program (that stapler specifically due to the movie Office Space, and therefore I also own one).

              • Wolf_359@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Makes total sense to me that you think this way then.

                I teach middle school and I think mostly verbally with pictures thrown in.

                “I should staple this” plays in my head and I have a dreamlike image of a stapler I’m looking for, or perhaps its location. If I focus, I can make those pictures very vivid, but usually they aren’t in my day to day.

                I talk to myself in my head literally non-stop. It’s a full day dialogue with myself - which I suppose makes it a monologue. But it’s pretty involved with a lot of back and forth.

                • Hackerman_uwu@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  It’s so interesting. I imagine your experience is something like Venoms relationship with Eddie Brock which cracks me up!

        • adam_y@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Absolutely. My day job is as a conceptual artist (seriously, the hours are good and I get to travel). Visualising objects is a large part of that. I’ve also worked in video game level design and found thinking in terms of 3D space pretty easy too. Just no words in there, or specifically, no voice.

    • TheDoctorDonna@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      That sounds heavenly. Mine will not shut up. And when I’ve run out of current problems to worry about, I start thinking about all my past fuck ups an embarrassments. And that’s just in the time it takes to a simple activity. When I’m at work it is constant flipping back and forth between my anxious thoughts and doing my work and worrying about how I might be fucking up my work.

      • Surp@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Try vyvanse meds bro it will calm those thoughts. Obviously talk to a doctor about it

        • TheDoctorDonna@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I truly wish there was someone who could properly diagnose me. I did take a RAADS test a while back but I didn’t have a psychiatrist to bring my results to, so I go undiagnosed and likely will forever with the current health crisis. I don’t know if I can go on something like that without a proper diagnosis. I can’t even find a family doctor unfortunately.

          But I appreciate the tip 😊 thank you.

    • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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      1 year ago

      Mine seems to appear when I’m not on auto-pilot. If I’m heating a can of soup, there’s no real thought. I’m probably thinking about other things while carry out simple steps. If I can’t find something, it’ll pop in and say, “Where did I leave that?” Or maybe something like, “I should call Mom cause it’s New Year’s Day.” Another is, “I’m glad I remembered my umbrella,” when in rain. But I don’t have monologue about putting on my shoes or locking my door. Those are mechanical tasks while I think about something else in an abstract fashion.

      • celeste@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Yeah this is similar to my experience. Some stuff gets done without that monologue, but I’m not completely without it.

    • scarabic@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I suspect that most people have a partial internal monologue, whereby some thoughts arise to the level of verbiage and others don’t. There is also variance in how self-aware we are of our thoughts themselves. I don’t think anyone can keep up effective, meta self-monitoring 100% of the time, so our own view of our thought process is probably skewed as well. Some people swear that every single thought they have is 100% verbalized. I think that’s impossible and they’re only counting verbal thoughts as thoughts. But no doubt some people verbalize more than others.

      • 0x0001@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Insightful, I’ve found that most people change their answers at least slightly after having time to observe their thoughts for a while, we are geniuses at believing our own conjectures.

        • BeardedGingerWonder@feddit.uk
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          1 year ago

          I’d say I can’t actively observe a thought without my internal monologue in some way narrating it or articulating what’s going on. Frankly that’s the reason I have difficulty understanding what it’s like for someone without internal monologue.

          • scarabic@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I’ve been able to observe myself stringing ideas together in a complicated way before actual words can land. The other day this happened and I considered stopping to put words to my thought and decided to just let it go and move on.

    • AnalogyAddict@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Yep, I don’t, either. I think mostly subconsciously, then in raw concepts, then images, then words. I have to actively translate what I’m thinking into language in order to consciously understand it myself or communicate it, but I do better if I externalize the language through writing or speaking.

      • adam_y@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        We’re very similar, I think. That externalisation as a way of understanding in particular.

    • LaunchesKayaks@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I have a mixture of types of thought processes. I mostly think in pictures and play things out in my head like a silent movie, but sometimes I have a monologue. Sometimes I think in a way I can’t describe with words.

  • slazer2au@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Because sometimes the rubber ducky would be embarrassed at the questions I ask so I ask me the questions first.

  • bstix@feddit.dk
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    1 year ago

    I think one key in the success of our species is the ability to plan ahead and mentally simulate what will happen before actually doing it.

    Doing this with language is not very different from imagining what will happen when doing a physical action.

    • scarabic@lemmy.world
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      I have imaginary conversations all the time where I simulate interactions with the people in my life and work. I’ll say something and then imagine their response and often go back and revise what I would say. This is how I prepare for conversations that might be delicate, where I want to get something across but not in a way that creates negative consequences.

      Other people say that they verbalize literally everything, as in, “I need to throw this rock in a gentle arc if I want it to hit that other rock there, oh dear perhaps I should adjust my grip and throw underhand instead.” My opinion is that this is functionally impossible. You can’t drive a car by verbalizing every command as you go - put a blindfolded friend at the wheel and try it sometime! I think one of two things is happening to people who say their monologue is exhaustive: they are only counting verbal thoughts as thoughts and ignoring the sea of inchoate impulses that churns beneath them. Also, I think any time we turn our attention to our thoughts themselves, those thoughts become verbal. To say it another way, any thought you want to think about you have to first pin down and define. You render it in words by directing your attention to it. I believe this leads people to believe that all their thoughts are verbal because all the thoughts they’ve looked at are always verbal.

      But I’d say this to those folks: have you ever forgotten the right word for something? There it is on the tip of your tongue but the word won’t come. This happens to everyone. And you’re clearly able to think about the whatness of the thing even in absence of the right word.

  • Hjalmar@feddit.nu
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    1 year ago

    Truly nobody knows, it’s an open research question. And to complicate matters more we know (as others have mentioned here) that everyone doesn’t think in the same way.

    • Art35ian@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I can offer you a very small example of a difference in thinking that I experience.

      I’m a grown ass man and I can’t easily tell my left from right. The best example of this is when I’m gaming and the tutorial tells me to press ‘left thumb stick’, I usually fuck it up. It took me a long time and a lot of thinking on it to realise what was going on. For me, left and right is not instinctive like up or down, but rather, it’s either a feeling, or not a feeling.

      The reason for this is because when I was 5 I nearly lost my left index finger in an accident. It was reattached, but during the healing process I was constantly told my left finger was the one I hurt, so I literally learnt left from right as ‘injury’ or ‘no injury’, which I then attributed to as ‘hurt’ or ‘not hurt’.

      So now, when I have to choose left or right, my brain has to remember an injury and where it was, then kind of feel that injury and tell myself that yes, I feel it so that’s left, or no, I feel nothing so that’s right. These steps take more time than a normal person’s automatic reaction to left or right direction.

      Imagine someone touching you and saying, “does this hurt”. It takes time to figure out if it hurts or not and then reply. Thats what I’m doing every time I need to identify left or right, and if there’s no time for that, like “quick, make a right turn here”, I’m forced to guess.

      And there is no way for me to unlearn this.

    • FelipeFelop@discuss.online
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      1 year ago

      We do actually know quite a bit about the Internal Monologue and other forms of intrapersonal communication.

      There isn’t one single use for it or benefit of it (in the same way water has many uses)

  • Kyrgizion@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    As an aside, there is a theory called the “bicameral mind” which posits that this internal dialogue is the source of religion. In ancient or rather even prehistoric times, it’s theorized that people started separating themselves from the voices in their heads in a spiritual way and this gave rise to the concept of a “God”.

    Far from proven but interesting nonetheless.

    • BeautifulMind ♾️@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      One interesting corollary to the bicameral mind theory is that our brains have multiple sentient centers to them- that in turn might explain that feeling of struggling with a decision and being able to see the same thing from more than one point of view. It also explains why different parts of the brain light up in different situations

      • clockwork_octopus@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I’ve never heard of that idea before, but it’s really interesting! I wonder how they’d be able to prove something like that?

  • paddirn@lemmy.world
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    What I find interesting is that supposedly, not everybody actually has an internal monologue, I just can’t even imagine what that must be like. But then I start to wonder, do I even have an internal monologue, is what I experience an actual “internal monologue”? I assume that I have an internal monologue, I definitely talk to myself and I have thoughts running around my head all the time, but I don’t know that I “hear” an internal monologue or what having an internal monologue is supposed to be like. Is what I experience the same thing as what everybody else is experiencing?

    • GladiusB@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I hate to sound heartless, but haven’t you met anyone that isn’t that bright? Like they may have a heart of gold but they couldn’t figure out a math equation if they were given all day. There are high school graduates that can’t even find directions on a compass for a map. I imagine that the lower end of intelligence does not have a inner monologue. And some other fringe reasons.

      • clockwork_octopus@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        It seems to me that you’re attempting to equate an internal monologue with intelligence, and I don’t think that’s a fair assumption. An internal monologue is just a brains way of formatting its thoughts and feelings about the information that flows in. There are many ways to do this, and one way isn’t necessarily “superior” to another. That’s just how brains work. And while many intelligent people do have this internal monologue, it’s absolutely not necessary for intelligence.

        Side note, one of the most brilliant people I’ve ever met is aphasiac, and doesn’t have an internal monologue.

        • Wolf_359@lemmy.world
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          I’m sure it depends on how you define intelligence.

          There are probably people without internal monologues who can solve any problem you put in front of them. But I do think there is a certain level of emotional intelligence that can’t exist without an internal monologue. I suppose one could externalize this process and just talk aloud to themselves in order to mull something over. But even then, you likely couldn’t do that all day every day. Those of us with internal monologues must glean some sort of benefit from essentially self-reflecting all day.

          Granted, all of this hinges on my limited understanding of consciousness being somewhat accurate. It’s possible that everyone has an internal monologue and some people just lack a connection in their brain that brings it to the forefront of their consciousness. Maybe some people’s IMs are in their subconscious and inform their actions in ways they simply aren’t aware of.

  • Lvxferre@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Chomsky would say that the original purpose of language is to structure thought, with communication being solely secondary. (Or something like this, I don’t recall it word-by-word.)

    If that’s correct, then internal monologues are simply a result of your brain processing your thoughts.

    • scarabic@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, language is an added analytical layer on top of our thoughts. We are clearly able to have thoughts without language (feral children for example are able to process their environment, plan and predict). But language adds a formality to it. Not to challenge Chomsky on his own turf but I don’t see how this can be separated from communication, since communication is how we acquire language. Does he really posit that even a feral child will have its own internal set of mouth sounds for organizing thoughts, even when it never speaks those to anyone? Seems backwards.

      • lightstream@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        What do you think evolved first - verbal communication or thoughts? Presumably we were able to think before we could speak, no? The words we have in our language are like pointers to internal concepts, and it seems to me that those internal concepts would have existed before language was a thing. The mouth-sounds as you put it are not the thoughts themselves, rather just labels for specific concepts. It might be possible and even convenient to think in mouth-sounds but it’s not necessary for logical thought.

        • scarabic@lemmy.world
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          Yeah I agree with you. There might be something to the other side of the coin though. For example, a feral human with no language will have “thoughts,” as we both agree. But they will probably be quite different than thoughts from someone with language. Having a word for something has a way of crystallizing a concept. With a lot of those at your disposal you might be capable of more sophisticated thought. It’s really hard to say since we don’t have feral people to study and we couldn’t examine their “thoughts” even if we did.

      • Lvxferre@lemmy.ml
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        Chomsky’s concept of UG (universal grammar) is able to handle this. Since there would be a chunk of language that is innate (universal), that feral child would share it. So, as a conclusion from that, even if the feral child isn’t expressing it through vocalisation, since they lack an “application” of the UG (like Nahuatl, Mandarin, Quechua, English, Kikongo etc.), they’d still have some rather simple internal monologue.

        …that said I think that Chomsky’s UG is full of shit. I do agree with him that the faculty of language might have developed first to structure thought; but my reasoning resembles a bit more yours, the role of language would be to formalise thought. Thinking without language is possible in the same way as moving across a village without roads - it’s doable but clunky, and you’ll likely take far more effort than with proper roads/ a language.

        Not to challenge Chomsky on his own turf

        Don’t worry. Everyone and their dog challenges him. Including himself, he’s often contradicting his own earlier statements.

        • modegrau@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Haven’t read the work, but if I can extrapolate based on assumption, this seems like something that makes sense in an innate way.

          Colour would be the best example. And I think it’s an interesting one. The utility in recognising district colours is fairly obvious. Our conscious and memory need a way to label the experience of encountering different wavelengths of light, Otherwise you wouldn’t be able to recognise them again surely? You at least need a form of language internally to have the ability to recognise a pattern you’ve experienced. To me that speaks to the utility of internal dialogue/monologue.

          Your own experience of a specific colour can differ wildly from another person’s. However, because the wavelength is the same, you can attach a common label to it.

          The question of which originated first is interesting to me, but because of the further point, a fundamental system of attaching common labels must exist. Kids can often sort objects in categories before language skills develop.

          Seems to me that we do have a universal internal language innate to all of us and we learn a common language later. It also stands to reason that the origins of external language must be based on ancestral internal language.

          Perhaps those without verbal internal monologue/dialogue have a more persistent innate language, that is not overwritten by common external language?

          /Ramble

          • Lvxferre@lemmy.ml
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            [Note: this is my personal take, not Chomsky’s]

            We can recognise colours and things even without properly labelling them. (Colour example: I have no clue on how to call the colour of my cat’s fur, but I’m fairly certain to remember thus recognise it.) However, it’s hard to handle them logically this way.

            • if you are outside and it is raining, then you get wet
            • if you get wet, you might get sick
            • so if you are outside and it is raining, you might get sick

            And at least for me this is the main role of the internal monologue. It isn’t just about repeating the state of the things, it’s about connecting pieces of info together, as if I was explaining the link to another person.

            Perhaps those without verbal internal monologue/dialogue have a more persistent innate language, that is not overwritten by common external language?

            Possible; I don’t know, really. It’s also possible that the “innate language” doesn’t really exist, only the innate ability to learn a language; but that ability is already enough to structure simple reasoning.

      • 0x0001@sh.itjust.works
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        I would say we all have thoughts without language with varying levels of frequency, think about moments where you or others have said “ah i know what I want to say but forgot the word”

  • kase@lemmy.world
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    Ok, I have a question for you guys.

    I consider myself to have an internal monologue, but it doesn’t just run all the time. Like, sometimes my thoughts have words, and sometimes they don’t. Is it like that for the rest of you who have an IM? I always assumed it would be, but considering some people don’t have one at all, it wouldn’t surprise me that much if some people had one constantly.

    I really tried to word this in a way that makes sense… sorry if it doesn’t lol.

    • Seasoned_Greetings@lemmy.world
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      One of the “constantly” group here. It’s a bit more like having someone to talk to all the time who is also me. I can turn it off, but it has to be a concentrated effort and as soon as I’m not concentrated on keeping it silent it comes back.

      I’ve spent many years wondering at the nature of the little voice, especially after I learned that not everyone has it. It’s not controlling or contradictory, it’s a bit more like a narrator for my feelings and a driving point for logic.

      I’ve come to the conclusion that what it actually is is my subconscious manifesting as a conversational partner. Kind of like an avatar that represents the part of me that isn’t the literal point of consciousness inside my head. Make of that what you will.

      Don’t get me wrong, I still think in pictures and non-verbal inclinations. That doesn’t really go away either. But it’s like having a narrator alongside it that also speaks in the first person.

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        You don’t consciously control yours? Mine is conversational with myself, but it’s a single entity. Like if it’s critical, it’s me being critical of myself, not one part of me blaming another part. It’s not a two-way conversation; it’s a monologue that I have full and conscious control of. I can cut it off but still know what it was going to say.

        • Seasoned_Greetings@lemmy.world
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          There is a voice I consciously control, and there is one that I don’t. They kind of intermingle into a single monologue, but I can still hear the one I don’t control when I consciously turn off my monologue. It’s still a quiet presence almost in the back of my mind.

          One way I’ve rationalized it, it’s like when you meditate and your thoughts still flow over you. You don’t actively control those thoughts, that’s kind of the point. I’m finding that those thoughts have a coherent voice for me. They speak through my monologue, but they are still there when I shut my monologue off. Under the surface, quieter, with the rest of the thoughts I don’t control.

    • KaiReeve@lemmy.world
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      My experience is the same as yours. I have an inner monologue, but it is not constant. My thoughts do not always come in the form of words.

      In fact, I would say that wordless thoughts are my default and the IM comes when I am trying to figure something out.

      • SendMePhotos@lemmy.world
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        Wow I’m like the complete opposite of you. Inner monolog is default and if I’m trying to figure something out it’s like pictures or a 3d model in my brain or, if in deeper thought, I’m not even here but in like, a different plane solving the issue in my head space.

        • aStonedSanta@lemm.ee
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          Same. It’s like a different part of my brain works for spatial reasoning, which I guess is true? Lol but yeah when truly focused you leave your plane to view something else. It isn’t only visual though it’s almost all encompassing in some ways. And generally is the “flow” state for me.

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          I’m not even here but in like, a different plane solving the issue in my head space.

          Exactly, I can be so completely gone, I don’t sense anything around me.

        • KaiReeve@lemmy.world
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          Hm, interesting.

          I can also have images when trying to figure certain things. For example, if I’m moving then I will have images of where to place boxes and furniture in the truck or in the apartment, but these images are typically combined with words like “if I put this here, then…” Or if I’m trying to remember where I put something then it’s memory combined with “after I got home I…”

          In fact, the easier a problem is, the fewer words I use. But when something is really stumping me, the words are more prevalent. And angrier. More like “This doesn’t make sense! If the positive and negative are both connected then power should flow through. Maybe this f*cking thing is broken”

    • SendMePhotos@lemmy.world
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      Same. Kind of both. When I’m doing like a Jimmy neutron brain blast, it’s all pictures and like… 3d models in my brain.

    • nutsack@lemmy.world
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      it may be many voices speaking simultaneously at different levels of consciousness. you don’t know how noisy it is until you do some zen cock garbage and temporarily experience inner quiet.

  • AlecSadler@sh.itjust.works
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    I am super confused what an internal monologue is as I’m fairly certain I don’t have one.

    If I did, I feel like it would annoy the shit out of me.

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      Read this sentence one word at a time. As you read it, do you hear the words spoken inside your head?

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        If that doesn’t work, turn on the tv and try to repeat the words you hear immediately after you hear them, but absolutely silently. The goal is to echo the television ij your head.

        That is your internal monologue.

        Now imagine you’re trying to sleep and the asshole part of your brain starts talking about the reality dumb-ass shit you did 25 years ago…

        Now imagine that you just got a song stuck in your head. You know the song really well… and you can’t stop repeating the hook in your mind.

        It’s your brain silently reading the captions of the narration of the images of your train of thought.

      • AlecSadler@sh.itjust.works
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        Oh, is that all it is? I guess I was reading it to be where I can hear myself talk to myself when reasoning things out or experiencing things.

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          I can do exactly what you are describing and do constantly and all day. You don’t debate on goings internally with words? That’s confused my brain. Wonder if it’s an ADHD thing on my end.

        • Gyoza Power@discuss.tchncs.de
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          Yep, it’s mostly that. Like a movie/show/anime protagonist narrating their reasonings and thoughts to the watchers, except there are no watchers and you are just talking to your inner self.

    • GlendatheGayWitch@lemmy.world
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      I think only about half the population think this way. Your voice is in your head speaking thoughts kinda like they show in movies. The other half thinks in pictures, shapes, colors, and sounds.

      • EddoWagt@feddit.nl
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        The other half thinks in pictures, shapes, colors, and sounds.

        Its definitely not that simple as I definitely have both, I’ve also heard a lot of people say “I’m a visual thinker”, but I’ve absolutely never heard of someone not being one do I’m not sure there is even such a thing as a non visual thinker

    • NotMyOldRedditName@lemmy.world
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      As someone else mentioned with hearing music, people can also smell smells, taste tastes and conjure up imagery. When they read books the reading turns into a movie like thing or something like that.

      It’s all bundled up as visualization.

      Some people can’t visualize at all, or can to varying degrees.

      When you can’t, it’s called Aphantasia. If you can’t do any visualization at all (maybe some can hear music, but nothing else) that’s called total aphantasia.

      The one part that’s still a weird conversation for me is the inner monologue. I can think, I can read words, but it’s not my voice? It’s not my voice like people say they can have a conversation with themselves or pretend to have one with someone else.

      So I lean to thinking I don’t have an inner monologue as others would describe and expect, but I still do?

      • AlecSadler@sh.itjust.works
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        I can’t visualize to save my life and it bothers me. It also leads to an insane lack of a sense of direction. A good friend told me to just go the opposite direction of what I feel - and 9/10 that actually works.

        When people ask me what someone looks like, I typically devolve to…“umm, a face, a couple arms, some hair”. I know it sounds dumb, but it’s actually impossibly hard for me to describe someone.

        I totally get the think/read but not your voice thing, I feel like it isn’t a monologue, it just…is?

        Granted I am diagnosed ADHD and partially in the spectrum, so I suppose that may play a part?

        • NotMyOldRedditName@lemmy.world
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          ADHD can impare visualization as well, and people with ADHD can also have Aphantasia.

          So maybe you have both? The connection between the two isn’t understood yet.

          The term Aphantasia is very new. Under 10 years old I think. I learned I had it before the term was officially a thing but there were a few articles about it without a name. I always thought people were just using visualization examples as a matter of expression, not something they were actually doing. E.g counting sheep.

          Also I totally understand what you mean about describing people. I’d be useless to a sketch artist

    • elscallr@lemmy.world
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      Can you summon a song in your head? A melody?

      It’s that… But it’s your voice. And you employ it to think. It’s how I argue with myself and reason my way through a thing. I’m not sure how I’d get along without it, except every once in a while I get stuck on a problem, so I do something different. Often, the right solution to the thing I wanted to do will pop into my head. Then I need to work backwards how I got there. Both are useful, I prefer the information up front though.

    • johnlobo@lemmy.world
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      it is annoying, you know schizophrenia? hearing voices? it is just like that but your voice only, and you heard it in your head but not your ears.

    • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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      Don’t you have an inner voice for instance when you read?
      I’m not sure I get the monologue part either, because I perceive it more as dialogue, and I always considered that normal. But maybe it’s a matter of perception?

      • AlecSadler@sh.itjust.works
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        I mean…sort of? It doesn’t really have a voice though it’s more like…just an understanding. I don’t know, this entire post has been fascinating.

  • RussA
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    I’m by no means a medical expert, so just a stab in the dark here - our brains constantly process all sorts of information. Whether that’s memories, input from your various senses, or a million other things. During that process, your brain is also trying to make sense of it all (“Why?”, “What does it mean”, “How?”, etc).

    Our ability to communicate and express language is intertwined in this process, which of course is what gives you the perception of dialog. So in essence, I think its just our brains trying to make sense of… its process of making sense, if that makes sense?

    On a side note, I’m practically dosing myself with semantic satiation with how many times I’ve used “sense” here (that last one being more tongue-in-cheek)…

      • RussA
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        It’s a bit difficult to say, but perhaps we did in say, maybe through the repetition of flashing images from our memory, or sounds, etc.

        Even without language, that internal “making sense” of things / interpreting the world around us still exists - I’d imagine if you were to ask someone who was deaf (starting at a very early age) they’d probably say there is a monologue of some sorts, even if not by “sound”, whether that be the flashing images of various hand signs, or written words, etc.

        • lightstream@lemmy.ml
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          I think it’s possible that internal language did exist before it could be vocalised. That is, before we evolved the necessary structures in the throat to make words, we were thinking according to basic grammatical rules e.g subject-verb-object. Words in human language are like labels for internal concepts, and those internal concepts would have existed before language was a thing.

          • RussA
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            That makes perfect sense, thanks! Seems like I was certainly onto something then. Part of me wishes that I had gone into this field as its very intriguing - perhaps in another life!

          • 0ops@lemm.ee
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            I think you’re right. I want to add though that those internal concepts aren’t nebulous things, they’re themselves made up of other dimensions of understanding. Like, i have the word “dog”, and I have an internal concept of a dog, but how exactly is “dog” conceptualized? In terms of senses. It looks like this, feels like this, makes these sounds. And it’s not only the classic 5/6 senses, it’s also time (it acts/moves like this) and hormones and other chemicals (it makes me feel this). Language (it’s called this) is a higher level abstraction of those, but when push comes to shove a word is just one more connection/correlation with dozens of other connected sensations that together form that internal concept

  • Rosco@sh.itjust.works
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    My guess would be it’s a side-effect, kind of like pareidolia. Us being extremely social animals, so much that being cast away from the tribe in our hunter-gatherer days would spell certain death, our brains have become extremely attuned to face/emotion recognition and language. So we have a tendency of using words to express ideas, even to ourselves.

  • elscallr@lemmy.world
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    I use it for reasoning. It’s a way to talk to myself without having to do so out loud, which I do a lot.

    There is a segment of the population who, apparently, don’t have one. Even deaf people apparently have an inner monologue of hand signs visualized. But this segment just lacks one entirely. I don’t understand how they think, how they come to a conclusion. Things just pop into my mind, when I take my mind away from other matters and let my subconscious bake on an item… is this the way they think about everything? I don’t know.

    • AlecSadler@sh.itjust.works
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      I never realized this was a thing until now and it kinda explains a lot.

      I’ve always wanted to be more visually creative and it has always been an extreme struggle, neigh impossible. Kind of nice to finally have a term for it.