Holy Syntax

i just read a NY Times article and a Wired magazine piece that says that Campbell's Monkeys not only have language but that we understand it.
Though some researchers have ascribed syntax to animals, it’s never been formally demonstrated — until now.
“People have criticized the use of ’syntax’ to describe animals just because they produce sequences of sound. They say that each unit has no meaning, that no rules explain how they’re combined,” said Lemasson. “Here we have rules of combination.”
For example, male monkeys called “boom boom” to gather other monkeys to them, but “boom boom krak-oo krak-oo” meant that a tree or branch was about to fall. Adding a “hak-oo” to that sequence turned it into a territorial warning against stray monkeys from neigboring groups. Multiple “krak-oo” calls added to an original “krak” meant not only that a leopard was in the area, but that it posed an immediate threat.
I recently saw Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey and I can't stop thinking about the phrase, "Dawn of Man." Curious George also comes to mind.

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