Contents

Title Page

Dedication

Epigraph

Some Notes on the Pirahã Language as Used in This Book

Preface

Prologue

Part One: LIFE

1. Discovering the World of the Pirahãs

2. The Amazon

3. The Cost of Discipleship

4. Sometimes You Make Mistakes

5. Material Culture and the Absence of Ritual

6. Families and Community

7. Nature and the Immediacy of Experience

8. A Teenager Named Túkaaga: Murder and Society

9. Land to Live Free

10. Caboclos: Vignettes of Amazonian Brazilian Life

Part Two: LANGUAGE

11. Changing Channels with Pirahã Sounds

12. Pirahã Words

13. How Much Grammar Do People Need?

14. Values and Talking: The Partnership between Language and Culture

15. Recursion: Language as a Matrioshka Doll

16. Crooked Heads and Straight Heads: Perspectives on Language and Truth

Part Three: CONCLUSION

17. Converting the Missionary

Epilogue: Why Care about Other Cultures and Languages?

Acknowledgments

A Note about the Author

This book is about past events. But life is about the present and the future. And so I dedicate this book to my wife, Linda Ann Everett, the constant encourager. Romance is a good thing.

I thus learnt my first great lesson in the inquiry into these obscure fields of knowledge, never to accept the disbelief of great men or their accusations of imposture or of imbecility, as of any weight when opposed to the repeated observation of facts by other men, admittedly sane and honest. The whole history of science shows us that whenever the educated and scientific men of any age have denied the facts of other investigators on a priori grounds of absurdity or impossibility, the deniers have always been wrong.

—ALFRED WALLACE (1823–1913)

The notion that the essence of what it means to be human is most clearly revealed in those features of human culture that are universal rather than in those that are distinctive to this people or that is a prejudice that we are not obliged to share. . . . It may be in the cultural particularities of people—in their oddities—that some of the most instructive revelations of what it is to be generically human are to be found.

—CLIFFORD GEERTZ (1926–2006)