Yes, he has. I know Bomhard quite well; I met him (only virtually, of course) on the Nostratic-L mailing list and had some private e-mail exchange with him. He is a rather nice fellow and treats other people with due respect even if their opinions are different, and is fully aware that his ideas are not "the truth" but only ideas of what might have been. This distinguishes him from the crackpots one meets so often on the 'Net, and I would say that he s not a crackpot but merely a speculator. He also said once on Nostratic-L that there were no professional Nostraticists. Bomhard is by profession an Indo-Europeanist, meanwhile a retired one. Nostratic is merely a personal interest of him. There are no chairs for "Nostratic studies" or "macrocomparison" at any university in the world.Richard W wrote: ↑Sun Aug 20, 2023 10:04 pmBomhard has recanted of this idea.WeepingElf wrote: ↑Sun Aug 20, 2023 5:37 am Yes. As were Hurrian and Urartian, spoken where those geneticists place Early PIE. This brought me to an idea which may be utterly nuts: There is this paper, which is a collaboration of a patent crackpot (Arnaud Fournet) and a less crazy but still adventurous Nostraticist (Allan Bomhard), which claims that Hurrian and IE were related to each other. But maybe Hurrian-Urartian was related to the language of those Transcaucasians who contributed to the gene pool of the Yamnaya people, and we are dealing with words from their language which made their way into PIE. But maybe there is really nothing to this at all.
Fournet, in comparison, whom I also have met on Nostratic-L, showed all the obnoxious behaviour of a typical crackpot. He was convinced (or at least tried to convince everybody) that his ideas were the truth, and offended people with different opinions, including the academic mainstream. For a short time, he had a blog titled "World Web Trolls, Idiots and Assholes" devoted to the sole purpose of insulting people with different opinions. That blog did not exist for long; I guess that it was shut down by the host because it violated usage terms. And while Bomhard recanted of the IE-Hurrian idea, Fournet went even further, claiming that Hurrian was closer to Non-Anatolian IE than Anatolian! (And he never even mentioned Urartian.)
Fair (though my impression is different). And Anatolian and Hurrian were neighbours, so one should rather think of convergence here.Hurrian and PIE, or at least Anatolian, do seem to have grammatical similarities, but the notion of lexical matches is not plausible.
Perhaps the person who drew the map misunderstood what the authors of the paper wrote. The family tree looks rather sane, even if the dating is probably wrong, and the distance between Anatolian and the rest is IMHO exaggerated. Also, it groups Tocharian with Anatolian, which seems erroneous to me. Just because these two are outliers doesn't mean that they form a node.And the actual family tree published in the paper, as opposed to the map, doesn't make such a claim. Rather, the relatedness of Greek-Armenian-Albanian to the rest of core-IE comes out as not well supported by the lexical evidence. The map attempts to depict them as stay-at-homes; it can't depict deep divisions.WeepingElf wrote: ↑Sun Aug 20, 2023 5:37 am At any rate, it is pretty certain that the Hittites, Luwians etc. were newcomers in Bronze Age Anatolia, arriving not long before 2000 BC, and that they came from the northwest. The northwesternmost Anatolian language, Lydian, appears also to be the most divergent one, though this is hard to say as Lydian is attested only late. See also this blog post. By the way, the map shown there, which is from one of the papers discussed here, shows an IE family tree which is utter bullfrogs: Greek is clearly not closer to Anatolian than to Italic, Celtic, Germanic and Balto-Slavic! We are clearly dealing with people who don't know the relevant facts here.