From LOJBAN%CUVMB.BITNET@uga.cc.uga.edu Mon Nov 7 23:46:52 1994 Message-Id: <199411080446.AA20989@nfs2.digex.net> Date: Mon Nov 7 23:46:52 1994 From: ucleaar Subject: Re: lo In-Reply-To: (Your message of Sun, 06 Nov 94 17:54:02 PST.) Status: RO pc: > We also agree that _lo_ and its ilk are +veridical and > -definite. I argue that, both because it is a description and to fill a > gap in the pattern, _lo_ and its ilk are +specific. The +veridical is > then essential, for without a known referent (-definite), the referent > cannot be determined except through its properties. I can only make sense of this if "-definite" means what we have so far been calling "-specific" and not what we have so far been calling "-definite". I think there are examples of +definite -specific beyond the "lo pa" cases we were talking about (Archduke Ferdinand's assassin, etc.): fifty-one of the states of the USA elect senators. [NB this example relies crucially on my belief that there are 51 states in the USA. If I am wrong about this, please change the figure to the correct number.] This involves existential quantification over states of the USA (or sets of states of the USA), so it is -specific. But you know what is being referred to (Arkansas, Arizona, ... Wyoming, etc.), so it is +definite. Jorge would call this "+specific, +definite", but the point of this message is to aver that LO is not necessarily -definite. By "-definite" I understand "the speaker does not believe that the addressee is in a position to (a) identify the referent [under one definition of definiteness] or (b) select the referent out of the set being quantified over [under another definition of definiteness]". Either way, +definite means (the speaker thinks that) the addressee knows which broda out of the set of all brodas is being talked about. I've already acknowledged that "definite" is sometimes used (in linguistics) to mean "+specific" (in Lojban-list sense), but unless we avoid that confusing usage we are hopelessly lost. ----- And