Showing posts with label proto-language. Show all posts
Showing posts with label proto-language. Show all posts

Monday, February 9, 2026

Can DOGS talk? Plants feel and talk (NOVA PBS)

Can Dogs Talk? | full documentary | NOVA | PBS

Of course we can talk! Are y'all deaf?
(NOVA PBS Official) Premiered Feb. 4, 2026: Do speech buttons really allow dogs to talk to us? Scientists investigate.

Imagine a world where our furry best friends could tell us exactly what they're thinking. A growing number of dog owners claim this is already happening, thanks to innovative word buttons that seem to unlock a new realm of canine communication.

What is it, Fido? - Umm, you gonna eat that?
But are these dogs truly understanding what we’re saying — and talking back? Are they really thinking creatively, applying words in new contexts? Or is this just clever conditioning?

What is he trying to say, Venerable? - He's tired during our 2,300-mile Peace Walk.
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We've been talking all along.
To find out, scientists are conducting the largest animal communication study in history, analyzing millions of button presses from thousands of dogs worldwide.

Witness astonishing moments that challenge our assumptions about animal intelligence, from dogs that seem to engage in conversations to those who learn new words with incredible speed.

Viewers must prepare to question everything they thought they knew about the minds of dogs and discover just how far their linguistic abilities might stretch.

CHAPTERS
  • 00:00 Introduction
  • 05:37 Studying button-pushing dogs
  • 16:06 Do dogs understand words?
  • 24:26 Human-dog relationships
  • 34:33 Multi-button responses: productivity
  • 49:54 Conclusion
© 2026 WGBH Educational Foundation. All rights reserved. This program was produced by GBH, which is solely responsible for its content. This program is made possible by viewers like your neighbor. Support local PBS station: pbs.org/donate. #novapbs

Monday, January 12, 2026

Who were the original "Aryans"?

The TRUE meaning of “Aryan” - Poseidon is also the "horse lord" to the ancients?


Sons of the Steppe | Part 4: India, Middle East, Anatolia from the Yamnaya to present day
When the Buddha spoke of the Aryans, he spoke of the "noble ones" (the enlightened).
Indo-European migrations - Tocharians into China (Wikipedia map)
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In this series, JK explores the full story of the Proto-Indo-European migrations — from the Yamnaya Steppe nomads of prehistory, through the ancient and medieval periods, all the way to the present day. The goal here is to create a simple, digestible overview that explains:
  1. How these migrations occurred
  2. Where the various archaeological, linguistic, and tribal names come from, and
  3. How they shaped the modern world we live in today
In Part 4, the series concludes by exploring the branches of the Proto-Indo-Europeans who migrated south into Anatolia, the Middle East, and India.

Part 1 covered Northern and Western Europe, following the chronicles of the Celtic and Germanic peoples. Part 2 explored the branches that gave rise to the Hellenic, Italic, Balkan, and Balto-Slavic peoples of the Mediterranean and Eastern Europe. Part 3 covered the branches that remained in the vast and ever-changing Eurasian Steppe.

SPANISH: (Historias Para Un Cafe) The white Tocharians of China?

TIMESTAMPS
  • 0:00 - Intro
  • 0:57 - Addressing Parts 1-3
  • 3:00 - The Meaning of "Aryan"
  • 6:20 - The first Yamnaya migrations
  • 8:18 - Bronze Age cultures
  • 15:25 - The fall of Troy and the Bronze Age collapse
  • 17:21 - The Iron Age and Vedic India
  • 22:44 - The Classical Age and the rise of Persia
  • 31:20 - The medieval Turkic and Arab expansion
  • 43:38 - The formation of modern nations
  • 49:17 - Outro
 Watch the first three parts:
  1. Part 1: Celtic and Ge...
  2. Part 2: Mediterranean...
  3. Part 3: The Nomads of...
Follow on social media where posts are posted daily: Instagram (jonaskilker), TikTok (jonaskilker). X (x.com/jonaskilker), Website: jonaskilker.com. Sons of the Steppe merch: constantinegraphicsco.com... Thanks to everyone who has supported this endeavor through the creation of this series through comments, shares, subscriptions, and even insights and bits of research. (A collaborative effort is truly enjoyable.)

THE SERIES
With this series completed, it is thrilling to have a solid framework to be able to reference as we move ahead and explore the virtually THOUSANDS of exciting and thought-provoking histories within all of these regions and cultures. Of course, this channel will also be exploring various topics in philosophy, mythology, and much more. This is only the beginning, the very, very beginning.
  • Jonas Kilker, Jan. 4, 2026; Pat Macpherson, Amber Larson, Dhr. Seven (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

DNA: origin of Indo-Euro languages


6,500-year-old DNA reveals origin of Indo-European languages spoken by half the world

Thousands of years ago, a group of hunter-gatherers roamed the steppes of southern Russia, hunting in its rivers and across its vast grasslands. They lived in a world without settlements, without writing, and without essential technology like the wheel. Yet, their language would one day become the foundation for nearly half the world’s spoken tongues, from English (British) and Spanish (Latin) to Hindi (Sanskrit) and Persian (Aryan and Indo-Iranian languages).
Who were these people? And how did their language spread so far and wide? A landmark pair of studies may finally have uncovered answers hidden in ancient DNA. By analyzing genetic material from over 400 individuals across Eurasia, researchers have traced the origins of Indo-European languages to a group known as the Caucasus-Lower Volga (CLV) people, who lived around 6,500 years ago.

This discovery not only solves a centuries-old linguistic puzzle but also reveals how the CLV people’s descendants — the nomadic Yamnaya culture — carried their language across continents, shaping the course of human history.

The hunt for the first Indo-European speakers

For decades, linguists and archeologists have debated the origins of Indo-European languages. Some argued that early farmers in Anatolia (modern-day Turkey) spread the language as they expanded their agricultural practices.

Others pointed to the Yamnaya, a nomadic herding culture that roamed the steppes of Russia and Ukraine around 5,000 years ago, as the likely pioneers of the root language.

Research led by geneticist David Reich of Harvard University bridges these theories. By analyzing DNA from ancient skeletons, the researchers found that the CLV people, who lived between the Caucasus Mountains and the lower Volga River, were the ancestors of both the Yamnaya and the early Anatolian farmers. Around 6,000 years ago, some CLV groups migrated west, mixing with local hunter-gatherers to form the Yamnaya culture.

Others moved south into Anatolia, where they interbred with early farmers and gave rise to languages like Hittite, the oldest known Indo-European language that we have written records of.

“We’ve been on the hunt for this for many years,” Reich told the New York Times. “This is the first time we have a genetic picture unifying all Indo-European languages.”

Genetic reconstruction of the ancestry of Pontic-Caspian steppe and West Asian populations points to four key locations. Credit: Nature. (© ZME Science).

The Yamnaya, researchers believe, thanks to their high mobility and herding practices, became the primary vector for spreading Indo-European languages across Europe and Asia.

“They spread from the steppes north of the Black and Caspian seas all the way to Mongolia on one side and as far as Ireland on the other — 6,000 kilometers!” David Anthony, an anthropologist and co-author of the study, told Harvard Gazette.

The discovery of the CLV people as the missing link in the Indo-European story marks a turning point in a 200-year-old quest. Earlier genetic studies had shown that the Yamnaya carried steppe ancestry into Europe and Asia, but the origins of their language remained unclear.

The new research reveals that the CLV people not only contributed to the Yamnaya genome but also to the ancestry of Bronze Age Anatolians. Previously, the absence of steppe ancestry among the Hittites had puzzled researchers. The new study shows that the Hittites likely inherited their language from the CLV people who migrated to Anatolia, rather than from the Yamnaya.

“The Caucasus-Lower Volga group therefore can be connected to all Indo-European-speaking populations,” said Dr. Ron Pinhasi, a researcher at the University of Vienna and co-author of the study. “They are the best candidate for the population that spoke Proto-Indo-European.”
 
Yamnaya culture at its largest expansion (© ZME Science)

Not everyone is convinced though. Some linguists, like Paul Heggarty of Pontifical Catholic University of Peru, argue that the first Indo-European speakers were early farmers in the Fertile Crescent, not hunter-gatherers in southern Russia.

“Genes don’t tell us anything about language, period,” said Mait Metspalu, a population geneticist at the University of Tartu in Estonia. Still, origin or not, the significance of the Yamnaya culture cannot be denied.

A remarkable people
Yamnaya People: Characteristics, Culture, Migrations | Early European history and religion
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The Yamnaya, descendants of the CLV people, revolutionized life on the steppes with their herding practices and use of wheeled wagons. Their superior technology most likely supercharged the spread of their language across vast regions through trade and conquest.

“I don’t think we can even imagine what it was like for other people to see a wagon coming,” said Anthony. “It was moving across the landscape, creaking and groaning, pulling a ton of equipment. People had never seen anything like it before.”

The Yamnaya also left behind a lasting legacy in their burial practices. Both the CLV and Yamnaya cultures buried their dead in large earthen mounds called kurgans, which have provided a wealth of archaeological and genetic data. “Suppose the Yamnaya had cremated their dead,” said Nick Patterson, a co-author of the study. “Chances are, we wouldn’t even know about this crucial culture in human history.”

As the debate over the origins of Indo-European languages continues, one thing is clear: The story is far more complex — and far more fascinating — than anyone imagined.

“There’s all sorts of mixtures and movements from places that these myths never imagined,” said Reich. “And it really teaches us that there’s really no such thing as purity.”

The findings appeared in the journal Nature. This story originally appeared on ZME Science. More

Monday, March 17, 2025

The origin of language in humans


The origins of language
(History with Kayleigh) Premiered March 17, 2025: Researching the origins of language, can we pinpoint when language first emerged? What do other great apes reveal about their use of language, and how does that tie into our own evolution and development of language? Let's find out. SPONSOR: AirLearn now: airlearn.onelink.me...
  • What's the oldest language in the world? The Tamil language from the Buddhist island of Sri Lanka (aka Eelam, the land of the Tamil Tigers, for which the longest civil war in Asia was fought), Southern India (Tamil Nadu), and Singapore (though surely Sanskrit must be much older than that)
Support me and my work: https://www.historywithkayleigh.live Links to all my socials and merch: https://beacons.ai/historywithkayleigh. Merch: https://www.historywithkayleigh.com. Become a Channel member: @historywithkayleigh.   Support me on Patreon: historywithkayleigh.

Friday, June 30, 2023

Sanskrit: The Most Scientific Language

Thinking Allowed TV  via videopostman, 1/31/11; Eds., Wisdom Quarterly

Sanskrit Language: The Most Scientific, Ancient, Spiritual
Most beautiful Hindu, Julia Roberts
(Videopostman) Thinking Allowed: "Sanskrit Tradition." Location: Israel. Prof. Dean Brown points out that most European languages can be traced back to a root (proto) language that is related to Sanskrit, the sacred (liturgical) language of the ancient Vedic Brahminical/Hindu religions of India.

Many English words actually have Sanskrit origins. Similarly, many Vedic religious concepts can be found in Western culture. Prof. Brown discusses the fundamental idea of the Upanishads -- that the essence of each individual, the atman (soul, self), is identical to the whole universe, the principle of brahman (the "ultimate reality").

In this sense, the polytheistic traditions of India can be said to be monistic or monotheistic at their very core.

CREDITS: rapidshare.com/files/396948324... Thanks to ThinkingAllowedTV for allowing upload of these videos. Visit the Thinking Allowed website at thinkingallowed.com and its YouTube channel at 
thinkingallowedtv. Copyright (C) ThinkingAllowed.com

Sunday, December 24, 2017

Olentzero: Xmas in Basque Country, Europe

Maiah A., Dhr. Seven, Ashley Wells, Wisdom Quarterly; Robert Sepehr; BBC.com


Peasant monk Budai
In Basque Country (Euskal Herria) there is no Santa Claus like there is in the rest of Catalonia, Spain, and France. We have Olentzero, a Basque peasant farmer who serves the role of Budai and Old Saint Nick distributing gifts to kids.

Just as Fat, Happy Budai is neither the Buddha nor Santa, so Olentzero is neither St. Nick nor Jesus. But that doesn't stop him from delivering the gifts and making everyone happy with his generosity and kindness.

First, who are the mysterious Basques or Euskaldunak (Vascos in Spainish)? No one knows. They seem to be one of the oldest groups in Europe judging from their unique language, Euskara.

They live in the Pyrenees between Spain and France. How old are they? They may be the surviving Atlanteans, late arrival Pleiadians (as Billy Meier disclosed), and/or Cro-Magnons of a former science-based human taxonomy.
 
Native European Basques

Rhesus Negative Blood Type Origins
Nestled in the mountains between France and Spain, there is a semi-isolated population of native European people who have long puzzled anthropologists, linguists, and historians. For although they are Caucasoid, they do not fit in with the rest of the European populations. Our rhesus factor is fixed by our genes. If one is rhesus positive (Rh+ positive), a protein (D antigen) is found on the surface of one's red blood cells. If one does not have the D antigen, one is rhesus negative (Rh- negative).
  • Robert Sepehr (Atlantean Gardens) is an author, producer, and anthropologist specializing in linguistics, archeology, and paleobiology (archeogenetics).

A Basque Xmas (dedalvs.tumblr.com)
Basque is, allegedly, not related to any other tongue, making it a "language isolate," and it is the oldest in Europe.

Basque Country is next to restive Catalonia, currently an autonomous region on the Mediterranean that is breaking away from Madrid and the former empire.

Second, they are strange. They are mountain folk who keep to themselves. They were once separatists, but Spanish Dictator Franco put the kibosh on that movement and forbade the speaking of the Basque language. Now only 35% of Basques can speak this precious linguistic gem, according to the BBC.

Myterious origins of Europe's oldest language

BBC.com; Robert Sepehr (Atlantean Gardens); Maiah A., Dhr. Seven (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
What does a "typical" mysterious Basque look like? Who can say? (pinterest.com)

The Mysterious Origins of Europe's Oldest Language: Euskara (Basque)
Basque Country (circled) vs. Spain, France
...I realized they were speaking an ancient language that has teetered on the brink of extinction.
 
Euskara, spoken in the autonomous communities of Navarre in northern Spain and the Basque Country across northern Spain and southwestern France, is a mystery:

The beautiful Basque Country of Spain/France in the Pyrenees Mountains
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Typical Basque dress
It has no known origin or relation to any other language [almost as if it came down from the sky, from space, from a heaven like the Pleiades], an anomaly that has stumped linguistic experts for ages.
 
“Nobody is able to say where [the language] comes from,” according to Pello Salaburu, professor and director at the Basque Language Institute at The University of the Basque Country in Bilbao. “Scholars used to research this problem many years ago, but there are no clear conclusions.”
 
The distinct language is a point of pride for Basques. But only an estimated 35% of the Basque population (or 700,000 of them) speak it today. More
()

Thursday, May 25, 2017

Learning Irish versus Gaelic (video)

Bitesize Irish Gaelic; Dhr. Seven, Pat Macpherson (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

Tuesday, March 28, 2017

Strange origins of "Irish" identity (video)

(Robert Sepehr/818encino) An old Irish legend about an ancient Egyptian Princess Scota; see Dr. Sigmund Freud's 1939 book Moses and Monotheism, or visit the "Vale of the Little Flower" (Glen Scotia). Ireland's long history is riddled with folklore, ancient mythology, and ancient societies, such as the Druids. Scota, in Irish legend, is the name given to the daughter of an Egyptian pharaoh. Sepehr is an author, producer, and anthropologist specializing in linguistics, archeology, paleobiology. Robert Sepehr: Species with Amnesia: Our Forgotten History


Knowledge, Wisdom, Spirit of Ancient Ireland with Gerard Banks
Equality CorkGerard Banks share knowledge and speaks openly about the ancient wisdom, spirit, and culture of the Irish (like iris, the eye, consciousness), the natural language and ancient spiritual connection to earth and the rest of the world.

This refers not only to Ancient Egypt but also ancient connections to the Moari language and New Zealand's Maori people.

Banks covers topics from spirituality to law and takes a look at the past in the hopes of understanding the present. Why was the Roman alphabet introduced to the Emerald Isle? To alter and suppress the natural harmonics and frequency of the Native Irish language?

We need to progress from here in harmony with this ancient heritage and the heritage of all other ancient global societies today.

(Andrew Power/Equality Cork, 2005) Some key terms: Ireland, Egypt, pharaohs, Scotland, Scota, princess, prince, king, queen, royalty, tyrants, dictators, blue bloods, throne, rule, ruling class, conspiracy, cover up, ancient hidden history, Africa, Afrocentrism, Europe, pyramids, megaliths, Sphinx, Antediluvian, pre-flood, deluge, pre-deluge, post-deluge, diffusion, civilization, Britain, England, Ethiopia, Land of the Pharaohs.
The Battle of the Boyne
Ireland: Land of the Pharaohs (Andrew Power)
Banks also speaks about what the "Battle of the Boyne" (Catholics vs Protestants, 1690) was spiritually really about: It was a ritual. It was the founding of sectarian violence in Ireland, used to divide the spiritual DNA of Ireland.
 
Sectarian = section-terrain, keep a people and nation divided for a reason. Why did King James of the House Stewart and his nephew King William of House Orange/Nassau organize this "family affair," this pretend-battle in the Boyne Valley?

Why did this family with representatives from all over the world have to come to Ireland to symbolize their transition and rule from the Reign of House Stewart to House Hanover? Indeed, why did they need to come to Ireland and the Boyne Valley to do this?

This affects the teaching and education of false laws in Ireland today. Universities are being run commercially based on untrue laws that only benefit the commercial exploiters of Ireland. False commercial empires continue to ruin the world for corporate profit, which goes against the very spirit, DNA, and heritage of the ancient Irish. More

  
Scota, Tuatha Dé Danann...
Elvenworld.org edited by Wisdom Quarterly
Princess Scota (Elven World)
Blessings. May you feel the Elven song within, hear the voice who speaks from your heart-space. We are Tuatha Dé Danann, the children of Nature and the stars. – T.E. Pelton, author, Elven World Mythologies

Scota  is the Tuatha De Danann ["Tribe of Danu"] Goddess of passion, positive magic, she who can slip through the surface of things and restore balance – Elven World, T.E. Pelton.
 
Scota - An Invocation for Our Times: I call upon Scota in these times when we are looking for the way/These times when we are asking for peace and end to suffering... More

Connected Histories: O’Dogherty
Ramon O'Dogherty
The Pharaoh Nectonechus and his Egyptian wife, Princess Scota, flee Egypt for Ireland
 
The O’Dogherty Clan of Inishowen consists of more than 400,000 families distributed throughout the world, with many in the US, Mexico, Ireland, Argentina, the UK, Australia, Spain, France, and so forth. Ancient legends describe in a remote past the origin of the Celtic race, which was established in the north of Spain, with a King Breoghan, who founded Betanzos, Brihuega, and Brigantia, and built the Tower of Hercules in Galicia. His sons from this tower saw through the Atlantic Ocean mists the British Isles and decided to organize an expedition to conquer them. More
  
The OBregon: "From Bregon"
Wisdom Quarterly Wikipedia edit
Statue of Celtic King Breogán and the Tower of Hercules in A Coruña, Spain (wiki)
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King Breogán (Bregon, Breoghan, or Breachdan) is a character in the Lebor Gabála Érenn, a medieval Christian history of Ireland and the Irish (or Gaels). He is described as an ancestor of the Gaels.
  • [Could there be a relation or connection to the legend of Brian Boru (Bóruma) and the O’Briens (see Ó Briain Dynasty)?]
The Lebor Gabála purports to be an account of how the Gaels descend from Adam through the sons of Noah and how they came to Ireland.

It tells us that they spent 440 years wandering the Earth and underwent a series of trials and tribulations, which is based on the tale of the Israelites in the Old Testament. Eventually, they sail to Iberia and conquer it.

There Breogán, one of their leaders, founds a city called Brigantia and builds a great tower. From the top of the tower, his son Íth can see Ireland. The Gaels, including some of Breogán's sons, sail to Ireland from Brigantia and take it from the Tuatha Dé Danann, the Irish gods.

Brigantia likely refers to A Coruña in present-day Galicia (Encyclopaedia Britannica) and Breogán's tower is likely based on the Tower of Hercules (which was built at A Coruña by the Romans) or the Tower of Babel.

The idea that the Irish Gaels came from Hispania may be based on the similarity of the names Iberia and Hibernia and the names Galicia and Gael (Patricia Monaghan, The Encyclopedia of Celtic Mythology and Folklore, Infobase Publishing, 2004. p.332). Medieval historians made similar claims about other nations based on their names... More

Some further reading