Phobia, Paranoia and Language

Shuvo Shams
1 min readMar 28, 2022

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Does phobia show that fear was the most important thing for us to evolve language?

Phobia is the irrational fear of things. Irrational because it is misplaced, we fear things that might have been an issue a long time ago, a fast-moving thing, a yellow stripe that might have been a snake.

These phobias are the remnants of when we needed them to survive our survival instinct. But in today’s world, these are sometimes if not often misplaced. We can have irrational fears. And they constitute phobia.

Now as we see in animals in the wild, the primitive languages that they develop, like certain primates calling on their partners when they see a tiger-their shriek is a language.

While they can do this to engage in real-time if they have to say that there will be a tiger the next day on that place at noon. They can’t, here is what we as humans have developed. We can say that, and we can acquire that fear through language.

How fast we acquire the fear is how well we adjust, rules for example of the road. A prime example of acquired fear is paranoia. We can suffer from the paranoia of fear that is excessive of situations.

Between our phobias and paranoia, we can say that we are able to situate ourselves. One is man-made the other is a gift from our instincts and mother nature.

Speaks volumes of us as humans too. We are after all, supernatural.

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Shuvo Shams
Shuvo Shams

Written by Shuvo Shams

Trying really hard to have one epiphany at a time in this dystopia.

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