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Stuttering and hearing loss | Journal of All India Institute of Speech and Hearing

ISSN


ISSN

Vol 3 No 1 (1972): .
Research Proposals

Stuttering and hearing loss

Published June 27, 1972
How to Cite
N, R., & NP, N. (1972). Stuttering and hearing loss. Journal of All India Institute of Speech and Hearing, 3(1), 193-197. Retrieved from http://203.129.241.91/jaiish/index.php/aiish/article/view/174

Abstract

The story often been recounted of the American Indian who stood up to stutter
a defiance to Wendell Johnson's paper "The Indian's have no word for it", at a
conference of the American Speech and Hearing Association. Mention has also
been made that after Robert West had hypothesized the impossibility of a diabetic
stuttering a gentleman in the audience announced that he was a diabetic who
stuttered. The Indian was a fake and was part of a practical joke ; the diabetic was
not. The main point is that the exception proves that rule is a good repartee at
casual conversation, but it is irrelevent in scientific explanations. It is important
that any theory which tries to be comprehensive explains or at least takes note of the
exceptions. The theory should not only include and explain exceptions to the theory
directly but it should also explain exceptions to the inferences that are drawn
directly from the theory. Thus the exceptions when explained helps to expand the
pre-view of the theory or when it is not explained limits the scope and strength of the
theory. While it is generally conceded that a theory works only within the limited
framework in which it is formed, theories when propounded sound dangerously
comprehensive. Therefore the exceptions become extremely important in challenging
such postures of comprehensiveness.

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