TITLE:
Indigenous Language, Technology-Education and Human Spiritual Potentialities
AUTHORS:
Anthony Chidozie Dimkpa, Innocent Chukwudi Eze
KEYWORDS:
Indigenous Language, Technology Education, Culture, Human, Spiritual, Potentialities, Gadamer, Religious Language, African, Nigerian, Man in General
JOURNAL NAME:
Open Journal of Philosophy,
Vol.13 No.4,
November
28,
2023
ABSTRACT: Language and technology are both culture-bound. While technology arises from the needs of a particular culture, language helps in the storage, preservation, and transmission of both the culture and the technology from one generation to another. Language is one of man’s most powerful developmental tools. Language determines to a large extent how one’s thought processes and brain functionality are wired. It determines how one perceives, interprets, reconstructs, and transforms their immediate environment into a more conducive habitat. However, a fundamental problem is that many learn and receive formal education today in the languages foreign to them. This, to some extent, hampers perception and understanding during instructional delivery, especially in areas where there is a discrepancy between the daily mode of communication and the official channel of academic instruction. The world would be richer if all people were to revert to their indigenous languages or to those of their earliest upbringing where they feel most natural and comfortable firsthand. The primary objective of this article therefore is to underline the irreplaceable and indispensable necessity of the need for academics and educational policymakers to prioritize once more the appropriateness of promoting as tools for teaching and learning, both the so called international languages and the indigenous ones. The immense spiritual density of local or indigenous languages provides them with such non-negligible keys for unlocking greater human potentialities over the ages in less time than their exclusion could ever achieve.