""Music," Henry Wadsworth Longfellow once said, "is the universal language of humankind." Indeed, the belief that there is something language-like about music has long fascinated not only poets such as Longfellow, but also scientists, philosophers, and thinkers from a variety of other backgrounds—not to mention linguists and music theorists. This course builds on this age-old interest from an interdisciplinary perspective, to explore the similarities and differences between music and language. We will examine, for example, how music and language function in different cultural contexts, as described by anthropologists, and how they evolved, and allow us to think, express and be creative, as philosophers, psychologists and biologists have discussed—and in the process, we will explore things as diverse as birdsongs and Beethoven symphonies, fractals and Neanderthal flutes, and grunge rhythms and the music of New Guinea. To help us ground our comparison of music and language, we will also learn some linguistic theory, within a framework developed by linguists such as Noam Chomsky. We will see, finally, how all of this leads to the striking proposition that music and language might actually be identical."