History, asked by shakalala, 1 month ago

literature and paintings are the best way of communicating ones idea to others comment on the statement​

Answers

Answered by sainathamhetre1111
0

Answer:

Human communication, or anthroposemiotics, is the field dedicated to understanding how humans communicate. Human communication is grounded in cooperative and shared intentions. Our ability to communicate with one another, can not be possible unless we have an understanding of what it is we are either referencing to, or thinking about. Though one can not read ones mind, there needs to be that creation of commonality in a shared mindset and/or viewpoint.[1] The field of communication is very diverse, there are multiple layers to what communication is, and how we use its different sectors and features as human beings.

Humans have communication abilities that other animals do not. Being able to communicate aspects like time and place as though they were solid objects are a few examples. It is said that humans communicate to request help, to inform others, and to share attitudes as a way of bonding.[1] Communication is a joint activity which largely depends on the ability to keep common attention, to share the relevant background knowledge and joint experience in order to get the content across and make sense in the exchanges.[2]

It certainly was a long road in the evolution of human communication. From the action of simply pointing and making hand gestures to communicate, to the use of spoken language. Most communication, while done via face-to-face, requires its own work of visually reading and following whom it is you are communicating to. Human communication also has the need for replying gestures, as well as eye contact.[1] As humans, we have an obligation to communicate in the way we were taught, and grew -up on. If one layer of communication grows, they all do. In a way, they work as a system, all coordinating with one another, to formulate what this field of communication and human communication is

Similar questions