Message-Id: <199411300116.AA04436@nfs1.digex.net> From: ucleaar Date: Tue Nov 29 20:17:00 1994 Subject: Re: lohe, lehe & ka In-Reply-To: (Your message of Mon, 28 Nov 94 16:05:50 EST.) Status: RO X-From-Space-Date: Tue Nov 29 20:17:00 1994 X-From-Space-Address: LOJBAN%CUVMB.BITNET@uga.cc.uga.edu Jorge: > > > Who says you have to write in the entry for Book everything that can be > > > claimed about {lo'e cukta}? Does the entry for London tell about what > > > happened in one of its buildings on May 27th just after lunch? > > > > Well if that is a fact about London, it would go in the ideal encyclopedia. > > I'd hate to have to search for any useful information in that ideal > encyclopedia. It sounds like Borges' library of Babel. It's hypertext, with megaintelligent search alogrithms. > > I find this stuff very mindboggling, but I recall from long ago > > John Cowan explaining this. I think (tentatively) that piro loi > > dodo *is* called Fritz. > > Then what's the difference between {piro loi cipnrdodo} and {pimu > loi cipnrdodo}? Well, if "loi cipnrdodo" is "Mr Dodo" (i.e. the category construed as having only one member, or as with all members being the same) then I guess piro loi C. is the whole of Mr Dodo and pimu loi c. is half of Mr D. You see half a dodo and say to me "ko viska pimu loi cipnrdodo". > > > I disagree that all properties of the members > > > are properties of the mass, if that is what you are saying. > > > > Well I am saying this, but in my defence I do think it Came From On > > High. > > I know, but you don't believe everything that comes from Up There, > do you? I do when it's signed "John Cowan". ----- And