Message-Id: <199411060025.AA07416@nfs1.digex.net> From: jorge@PHYAST.PITT.EDU Date: Sat Nov 5 19:25:15 1994 Subject: Re: context in Lojban Status: RO X-From-Space-Date: Sat Nov 5 19:25:15 1994 X-From-Space-Address: LOJBAN%CUVMB.BITNET@uga.cc.uga.edu la'o gy Bob Chassell gy cusku di'e > ucleaar@ucl.ac.uk cisku di'e > So even if there exists a real box that you do need, but you need neither > of the boxes in the "contextual range", then the utterance is false > - according to you. I am incredulous that this really is the official > line on LO. > > Not incredible at all. Surely, if the box I need is not in the > "contextual range", then it is not `for real'. What seems incredible is that there will ever be a context where only a single box will be real. That is what is required for {lo tanxe} to be specific, and that context seems extremely improbable. > My sense of Lojban style is that people will tend to use {lo} and > {loi} more often than {le} or {lei} Some ststistics from Lojban text that appeared in the list: le 3093 lo 669 lei 405 loi 280 This means that {le} is about five times more frequent than {lo}, among today's users. > -- after all, people think of > themselves and others as talking about `reality' (even of unicorns, in > context), and shifting to a context in which you are *designating* > something according the predication that follows the {le} or {lei} > requires effort ---why not talk about the real thing itself? Because as I've been trying to explain, the primary distinction between {le} and {lo} can't be 'reality'. I almost always use {le} for real things. I don't use {lo} in those ocasions because that would change the meaning, not because I want to leave open the possibility of not-really. Using {lo} changes to nonspecific referents, and that is often not what is meant. > The categorizers {le} and {lei} lead to metaphor. Not necessarily. In most cases, they refer to the real thing, and changing to {lo} is not an option. Jorge