Lucretius and the Bat with Blue Eyes

Explaining the Universe with the Alphabet

A novel reading of De rerum natura through the lens of neurolinguistics.

In the poem De rerum natura, written in the first century BC, Lucretius set out to explain the atomic theory of the universe and the triumph of reason over superstition to a Roman audience. In Lucretius and the Bat with Blue Eyes, a collection and critical translation of every passage on language in this great classic, renowned neurolinguist and novelist Andrea Moro explores the role of the human language and specifically the generative capacity of the alphabet to reach this goal.

In Moro’s reading, De rerum natura treats the birth of language as a case study in distinguishing humans from other animals, anticipating some key concepts of the theory of evolution, in both Darwinian and molecular terms. The book considers the major commentaries on Lucretius’s work, both ancient and modern, and concludes by looking at a recently discovered letter by Descartes that addresses the idea of a “perfect language.”

Focusing on a challenging yet highly poetic text and grounded in the ideas of neuroscience and linguistics, Moro’s book is also a deeply personal document, ultimately addressing the role of reason on contrasting human suffering.
Andrea Moro is Professor of General Linguistics at the Institute for Advanced Study (IUSS) in Pavia and at the Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa, Italy. He is the author of Impossible Languages, The Boundaries of Babel, Dynamic Antisymmetry, and A Brief History of the Verb To Be, all from the MIT Press.
Prologue: A Glass with Water and Ice and a Pro Domo Mea Note

1. First Part
Language as a Tool or To Explain the Universe with the Alphabet
1.1. To Decompose
1.2. To Compose
1.3. To Develop

2. Second Part
Language as an Object of Inquiry or the Question of Origins
2.1. Because Language is Born
2. 2. How Language is Born
2.3. The Blue-Eyed Bat

Finale: The Alphabet and the Plague: What Remains of Reason
i. The Order of Thoughts: Descartes and the Dream of a Perfect language
ii. Fear, Reason (and Hope)

About

A novel reading of De rerum natura through the lens of neurolinguistics.

In the poem De rerum natura, written in the first century BC, Lucretius set out to explain the atomic theory of the universe and the triumph of reason over superstition to a Roman audience. In Lucretius and the Bat with Blue Eyes, a collection and critical translation of every passage on language in this great classic, renowned neurolinguist and novelist Andrea Moro explores the role of the human language and specifically the generative capacity of the alphabet to reach this goal.

In Moro’s reading, De rerum natura treats the birth of language as a case study in distinguishing humans from other animals, anticipating some key concepts of the theory of evolution, in both Darwinian and molecular terms. The book considers the major commentaries on Lucretius’s work, both ancient and modern, and concludes by looking at a recently discovered letter by Descartes that addresses the idea of a “perfect language.”

Focusing on a challenging yet highly poetic text and grounded in the ideas of neuroscience and linguistics, Moro’s book is also a deeply personal document, ultimately addressing the role of reason on contrasting human suffering.

Author

Andrea Moro is Professor of General Linguistics at the Institute for Advanced Study (IUSS) in Pavia and at the Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa, Italy. He is the author of Impossible Languages, The Boundaries of Babel, Dynamic Antisymmetry, and A Brief History of the Verb To Be, all from the MIT Press.

Table of Contents

Prologue: A Glass with Water and Ice and a Pro Domo Mea Note

1. First Part
Language as a Tool or To Explain the Universe with the Alphabet
1.1. To Decompose
1.2. To Compose
1.3. To Develop

2. Second Part
Language as an Object of Inquiry or the Question of Origins
2.1. Because Language is Born
2. 2. How Language is Born
2.3. The Blue-Eyed Bat

Finale: The Alphabet and the Plague: What Remains of Reason
i. The Order of Thoughts: Descartes and the Dream of a Perfect language
ii. Fear, Reason (and Hope)
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