Otherwise it's too easy to make mistakes like confusing incidental groupings in your language with natural categories.
Is that actually true? My understanding was that Sapir-Whorf had little experimental backing for anything that really mattered, and then there was that recent search showing extreme regularity in how color names were assigned...
Poly-linguals keep claiming that Sapir-Whorf is really true. Here's Eric Raymond responding to a comment I left earlier today,
...And I must tell you that based on my experience as a crib bilingual who has spoken four languages I don’t think strong Sapir-Whorf is a mistake at all. I have actually felt the effect on my thoughts when I code-shift between languages, and if the reports I’ve heard from other polylinguals are to be believed this is an experience we all have. It is also relevant that I can think things in mathematical notation or Python that I can
This morning I read an interesting post on the future of education. I thought it would be interesting to have some members of LessWrong discuss it. I know it is idealistic, but some of the points raised were interesting.
Thoughts? Comments?