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Hello all!
So, for those not familiar, conlangs (constructed languages) are exactly what they sound like: languages that are deliberately made rather than arising from standard human language usage. Now, it may just be my own biases as someone whose formal academic training is in (computational) linguistics, but I've always found language as a particularly relevant facet of semiotics and, by extension, the esoteric/spiritual; our language function is so entrenched in our brains on a physiological level and by extension provides a lot of insights into how we humans organize and structure our experience of the world. Additionally, language and writing alike have been treated as mystical by various traditions, often with close ties to psychopomps (Thoth, Odin, and Hermes as obvious examples) and necromancy/katabasis/contact with the beyond/etc, or being seen as cosmically structural (in Abrahamic religions with Kabbalistic thought, the notion of the logos, God speaking the world into existence; see also the generative role of storytelling in Anishinaabe religion, etc).
All this being said, I've seen what I find to be a remarkably few attempts to deliberately engineer a sort of linguistic spiritual tool. I take this as separate from sacred or liturgical languages, as those are already spoken languages elevated to the status of magical rather than being intentionally designed as such. Off the top of my head, I've only really heard of Hildegard of Bingen’s Lingua Ignota, and perhaps the Damin language used by the Lardil and Yangkaal or the Enochian language of Dee & Kelly, and only the lattermost feels close to what I would expect from a "magic conlang." I imagine that the scarcity is due to the relative obscurity and youth of linguistics as a formal field of science, and the time-consuming process that actually is constructing a language, as well as the pre-existence of ceremonial/sacred/liturgical languages.
I've done some dabbling with smaller conlangs and personal ritual scripts and once attempted to make a sort of consolidated system for shamanic talismans, but I'm curious if and how anyone else has tried to implement or use conlanging as a part of their own spiritual praxis?
So, for those not familiar, conlangs (constructed languages) are exactly what they sound like: languages that are deliberately made rather than arising from standard human language usage. Now, it may just be my own biases as someone whose formal academic training is in (computational) linguistics, but I've always found language as a particularly relevant facet of semiotics and, by extension, the esoteric/spiritual; our language function is so entrenched in our brains on a physiological level and by extension provides a lot of insights into how we humans organize and structure our experience of the world. Additionally, language and writing alike have been treated as mystical by various traditions, often with close ties to psychopomps (Thoth, Odin, and Hermes as obvious examples) and necromancy/katabasis/contact with the beyond/etc, or being seen as cosmically structural (in Abrahamic religions with Kabbalistic thought, the notion of the logos, God speaking the world into existence; see also the generative role of storytelling in Anishinaabe religion, etc).
All this being said, I've seen what I find to be a remarkably few attempts to deliberately engineer a sort of linguistic spiritual tool. I take this as separate from sacred or liturgical languages, as those are already spoken languages elevated to the status of magical rather than being intentionally designed as such. Off the top of my head, I've only really heard of Hildegard of Bingen’s Lingua Ignota, and perhaps the Damin language used by the Lardil and Yangkaal or the Enochian language of Dee & Kelly, and only the lattermost feels close to what I would expect from a "magic conlang." I imagine that the scarcity is due to the relative obscurity and youth of linguistics as a formal field of science, and the time-consuming process that actually is constructing a language, as well as the pre-existence of ceremonial/sacred/liturgical languages.
I've done some dabbling with smaller conlangs and personal ritual scripts and once attempted to make a sort of consolidated system for shamanic talismans, but I'm curious if and how anyone else has tried to implement or use conlanging as a part of their own spiritual praxis?