My thoughts are largely made up of words. Although some internal experimentation has shown that my brain can still work when the internal monologue is silent, I still associate ‘thoughts’ very, very strongly with ‘internal monologue’.
I think that, while thoughts can exist without words, the word make the thoughts easier to remember; thus, the internal monologue is used as part of a ‘write-to-long-term-storage’ function. (I can write images and feelings as well; but words seem to be my default write-mode).
Also, the words—how shall I put this—the words solidify the thought. They turn the thought into something that I can then take and inspect for internal integrity. Something that I can check for errors; something that I can think about, instead of something that I can just think. Images can do the same, but take more working-memory space to hold and are thus harder to inspect as a whole.
I presume you cannot jump to the next thought without saying the previous one in full.
I don’t think I’ve ever tried. I can generate sentences fast enough that it’s not a significant delay, though. I suspect that this is simply due to long practice in sentence construction. (Also, if I’m not going to actually say it out loud, I don’t generally bother to correct it if it’s not grammatically correct).
My thoughts are largely made up of words. Although some internal experimentation has shown that my brain can still work when the internal monologue is silent, I still associate ‘thoughts’ very, very strongly with ‘internal monologue’.
I think that, while thoughts can exist without words, the word make the thoughts easier to remember; thus, the internal monologue is used as part of a ‘write-to-long-term-storage’ function. (I can write images and feelings as well; but words seem to be my default write-mode).
Also, the words—how shall I put this—the words solidify the thought. They turn the thought into something that I can then take and inspect for internal integrity. Something that I can check for errors; something that I can think about, instead of something that I can just think. Images can do the same, but take more working-memory space to hold and are thus harder to inspect as a whole.
I don’t think I’ve ever tried. I can generate sentences fast enough that it’s not a significant delay, though. I suspect that this is simply due to long practice in sentence construction. (Also, if I’m not going to actually say it out loud, I don’t generally bother to correct it if it’s not grammatically correct).