Universal Method: L'4

Choice of Name: Using the term universal to refer to language in a specific large society may seem inappropriate because the term often refers to matters that cross societies and cultures. An alternative that has been suggested is public.

Features

This is the way language is used to widely communicate within a specific society, and so you must be socialized to appreciate it. Words, phrases and non-verbal stimuli like sounds, colours and emblems have a conventional usage. Their mastery defines you as a genuine member of that society. Meanings of words are typically explained via dictionaries, which are revised as society evolves. Graphic and sonic conventions also evolve. Many non-verbal aspects to assist integration are current etiquette and explained in regularly updated 'how to' guides e.g. how to dress, how to party.

The main concern in the method is about ensuring that the speech or text captures interest quickly. Text must be readable with ease, as in popular novels. Speech must be easy to follow, as in television news and game shows. The content in all cases should only seem to be sufficiently precise, true, factual and logical, because scrutiny is rarely desired or expected.

Because every symbolic word or behaviour carries a social value, thought processes are oriented to the definition and sharing of values. Universal language is generally understood, so it fosters rhetoric to shape attitudes and conventions, enable solidarity and release socio-emotional energies for good or ill. Its nature is then provocative as much as evocative.

Communication here can enable:

  • cohesion/division—through repeated expression and affirmation of values
  • approval/disapproval—everything is judged by unknown others
  • persuasion/opposition—relevant to campaigns, public relations, propaganda
  • conformity/uniqueness—through sounding like everyone else or not
  • emotional activation—tapping into motivation and directing action.

The method is essential when the goal is to interact with large numbers of unknown people via public media. Social media were restricted before the invention of printing. Popular newspapers, magazines and pamphlets were then dominant for a long time. Then radio and television emerged. Now the Internet hosts many web-sites and app services with a universal flavour. While some groups of followers may use associative-L'2 language, blogs seeking public consumption require far more attention to what is said and how it is said.

Examples

ClosedPolitical Speech

ClosedAdvertising blurbs

ClosedPopular Blog Extract

Criticisms: Fair and Unfair

The universal method is typically disconnected from specifics, pays scant attention to fallacies, and has no control over unsubstantiated assertions. Defects include: disorganization, ambiguity, inconsistency, irrelevancy, excessive emotionality, manipulation and assertions without substantiation.

As a result, the method allows power-elites to pander to prejudices, activate our baser emotions, and take advantage of the unwillingness of many to think for themselves. The use of rhetoric to influence others is as alive today in political fora as it was over two millennia ago in Athens, the birthplace of democracy.

Advertisers work in a more subtle way, creatively tapping into our wish to identify with the rich and powerful, to succumb to temptations, and to rely on emotions and bias-driven intuitions when making choices.

Because the universal method is inherently imprecise, it can seem like waffle. An expert reading an account of work in his own specialty in the popular press usually regards it as a travesty. Nevertheless, this way of using language is the principal way that people talk about their needs and seek to improve the functioning of their society.


Originally posted: 5-Jan-2013. Last amended: 10-Feb-2023.