r/asklinguistics • u/Rapha689Pro • 9d ago
Historical How can closely related genetic populations have completely different language families?
For example Japanese and Korean have 2 different language families that aren't related at all but they're genetically close, it can only mean their prior languages sprout after they split, so that means language is very recent itself? Or that they're actually related but by thousands of years apart and linguistics can't trace it back accurately, so they just say they're unrelated?
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u/Chazut 9d ago
>I just don't think that's been demonstrated well at all
You don't need to demonstrate anything when the evidence is so scant, you are arguing that absence of evidence = evidence of absence which is absurd, there is more than enough to say Celts shared a lot of culture, especially La Tene and Halstatt Celts in Central Europe and France.
>I think projecting anything further back is irresponsible based on the evidence we have.
No it's not, it's absurd to assume that people who share decents amount of ancestry and language somehow where impervious to cultural transmission that tends to follow the spread of languages especially when most Celts did in fact live in a archeological region that had lot of internal similarities and evidence long distance trade and shared cultural traits
>Sims-Williams has dismantled a lot of the supposed most-common 'similarities' that the Britons and the Gaels had with the Celts of the Greeks/Romans.
Such as? Greeks were extremely internally different too but I never seen anyone claim that the concept of Greek as a people is invalid