Return-Path: <@SEGATE.SUNET.SE:LOJBAN@CUVMB.BITNET> Received: from SEGATE.SUNET.SE by xiron.pc.helsinki.fi with smtp (Linux Smail3.1.28.1 #1) id m0sgaOG-0000ZHC; Thu, 10 Aug 95 19:23 EET DST Message-Id: Received: from segate.sunet.se by SEGATE.SUNET.SE (LSMTP for OpenVMS v0.1a) with SMTP id D80BC59B ; Thu, 10 Aug 1995 18:23:24 +0200 Date: Thu, 10 Aug 1995 11:26:31 -0500 Reply-To: "Steven M. Belknap" Sender: Lojban list From: "Steven M. Belknap" Subject: negation To: Veijo Vilva Content-Length: 1365 Lines: 46 > For example small is not the same as not-big. In my playing with > languages right now I put 'j' as being the opposite and 'n' being negation. > so: > > small = jbig > not big = nbig > not small = njbig > > Is it worth so much that opposite words should be on their own and > develop freely? I have great difficulties understanding that... > > Could you explain! reminds me a bit of the language in 1984 by Orwell - and the like. I am trying to see if my preference for having pairs of opposite words is more than just prejudice. There are some words in English that don't have easily accessible opposites (sweet, for example) But is this just an implicit recognition of physiology or randomness? I think inversion for some predicates is more complex than just "opposite" or "negation" Consider red - green red - white red - black red - (any other non-red color) Each pair could be considered as opposites by some reasonable criteria. In fuzzy terms, some predicates vary from zero to one, others from zero to infinity, others from negative one to positive one, others from negative infinity to positive infinity. -Steven Steven M. Belknap, M.D. Assistant Professor of Clinical Pharmacology and Medicine University of Illinois College of Medicine at Peoria email: sbelknap@uic.edu Voice: 309/671-3403 Fax: 309/671-8413