creepy_rabbit said:
b
Kpt._Rob said:
It wouldn't. We actually have case studies of where this has actually happened. These are called feral children. (though they're not the result of experiment so much as unfortunate circumstance). The point is that there is a critical age, after which the mental structures in the brain designed for the learning of language begin to degrade, so a child raised by dogs would probably not be able to learn more than the crudest basics of the human language.
but we "normal" humans can learn many languages
That's not how it works.
A man once tried to raise a chimpanzee alongside his child, hoping that the chimp would be able to show some human characteristics. Instead, the child became more like a chimp.
The human brain is very impressionable, able to deal in the abstract and blah blah blah.
Languages are based off of the conveyance of ideas. "iuvenis est stultus" conveys that "(the) young man is (an) idiot". Dogs use barks and body language to communicate.
The learning of other languages consists of a breakdown of what constitutes the language (alphabet, kanji, etc), and the concepts conveyed through this system. In Japanese, the word for brown is "chairo", which means "tea colour". To some cultures, blue and green were the same colour.
Dogs are colourblind carnivores. The concepts they recognize are more along the lines of leadership, friend, enemy, prey, shelter, territory, mate, offspring, food.
If human beings were incapable of communicating these ideas to dogs, I imagine they'd eat us all (as animals are prone to do).
Also, it's already happened:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lMbf8R9BPyg