Linguistic Justice Requires an Artificial Language: a Comment on van Parijs Cover Image

Linguistic Justice Requires an Artificial Language: a Comment on van Parijs
Linguistic Justice Requires an Artificial Language: a Comment on van Parijs

Author(s): Jaap Maat
Subject(s): Social Sciences, Language studies, Language and Literature Studies, Communication studies
Published by: Scientia Kiadó
Keywords: artificial languages; seventeenth-century language planners; Esperanto; injustice to Anglophones; multilingualism;

Summary/Abstract: In advocating the use of a global auxiliary language, Van Parijs forms part of a tradition that stretches back to the seventeenth century. However, he differs from this tradition in promoting the use of English rather than an artificial language of some sort. This paper examines the theoretical situation that van Parijs proposes as the most fair, in which English functions world-wide as the preferred auxiliary language and in which certain measures have been taken to counterbalance injustices of three types. I draw attention to injustices of each of these types done to speakers of English in that situation. This leads to the conclusion that proposals to use an artificial language as a global lingua franca that were made in the seventeenth and later centuries have a stronger case than van Parijs has argued.

  • Issue Year: 2016
  • Issue No: 09
  • Page Range: 77-81
  • Page Count: 5
  • Language: English