Return-Path: Received: (qmail 27072 invoked from network); 24 May 2000 17:34:28 -0000 Received: from unknown (10.1.10.26) by m1.onelist.org with QMQP; 24 May 2000 17:34:28 -0000 Received: from unknown (HELO imo16.mx.aol.com) (152.163.225.6) by mta1 with SMTP; 24 May 2000 17:34:28 -0000 Received: from Pycyn@aol.com by imo16.mx.aol.com (mail_out_v27.9.) id a.a3.667eb4e (618) for ; Wed, 24 May 2000 13:34:25 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: Date: Wed, 24 May 2000 13:34:24 EDT Subject: FAQ: Lojban and Loglan (corrected) To: LOJBAN@egroups.com MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Mailer: AOL 3.0 16-bit for Windows sub 41 From: pycyn@aol.com X-Yahoo-Message-Num: 2830 Content-Length: 5967 Lines: 99 First, what do they have in common, to make the question of differences relevant? 1. They share the first thirty years of the history of the Loglan Project. The late Dr. James Cooke Brown started the project in 1955 and published the first report of it in the Scientific American in 1960. After that he led it through two cycles of funding , development and enthusiast participation before the separation in the late 1980's. Loglan continued to be developed under that name by Dr. Brown's group, The Loglan Institute, while a separate group, The Logical Language Group, centered on Robert LeChevalier and John Cowan, continued its development under the name Lojban. The separation was over political issues of control of the language; it did not directly affect the design features from the prior development. 2. First among these features, first order predicate logic formed the basic grammar of the language. To make a usable language Dr. Brown added such logical frills as identity, descriptions of various sorts, variables over predicates and reduction devices to bring higher order logic grammatically within the first order. More practically, he added devices for carrying on conversations: ways of forming commands, questions, exclamations, ways of expressing emotions, of referring to the passing scene and so on. 3. But through all of this, he intended to keep the feature of first order logic that it is uniquely decomposable, has only one possible parsing. Early on this meant practically little more than that any string of sounds or letters that composed a legitimate Loglan sentence could be broken into words in exactly one way. In the end, however, both Loglan and Lojban have grammars which uniquely -- and correctly -- parse every legitimate sentence of the language -- and computer programs that implement these grammars. This is a feature of no other language with a reasonable claim to be a full human language. 4. At the heart of this system is a division of word classes on strictly phonological grounds: primitive predicates of form C'VCCV or CC'VCV, other predicates containing CC in their first five letters, ending in V and having penultimate stress (and a plethora of other conditions), names ending in C, and the remaining functional words -- the logical, emotional, conversational, words as well as much of the necessary grammar -- spread over V, VV, CV, and CVV. 5. The primitive predicates in each language derive from words for the corresponding concepts in the major languages of the world, in such a way as to maximize the recognizability of the created word by similarity -- perhaps not obvious ones -- with the home language of many people. In addition, each primitive predicate gives rise to one or more unique fragments which can combine to form new predicates with meanings derived from the meanings of the constituents. Each such compound is, of course, uniquely decomposable into its parts. But superficially a passage in Loglan and the same content in Lojban will look very different. This results from some of the conditions that created the split originally and from the years of independent development. 1. One of the political issues was over who owned Loglan, with the Institute claiming to have in effect a copyright on every word of the language. To meet this problem, the Group recreated all of the primitive predicates, using the same algorithm but 1980 statistics (rather than 1950), which gave a new list of major languages and new weights to them. In addition, the Lojban process took into account the need for unique compound-building fragments, which had been added late and ad hoc in Loglan. The result is that the two sets of primitives are entirely different (I haven't checked but I doubt there are more than a couple of real matches and probably as many homonyms). The various parts of the little word (V, VV, CV, CVV) space were also reassigned, so the distribution of items in this area are quite different. Lojban has been quite enthusiastic in expanding some of the original categories of little words, so that direct correlates in Loglan are not always easy to find. 2. Further, to carry out some of these tasks, Lojban added an item to the phonology of Loglan and changed the representation of one sound. Lojban text contains ' and x; Loglan does not have the first and uses h for the second. 3. Over the years, both the TLI and LLG have had to deal with a variety of problems in their grammars. Each has found solutions for these problems as they arose, but they have not generally found the same solutions. Thus, the two grammars -- while they agree over a large part of the two languages -- will give different parsing in some cases, perhaps one even rejecting what the other accepts. 4. Similarly, over the years each group has had to decide what certain structures mean and how to say certain things. Again, the decisions have been made independently and thus usually differently. This extends even to the meaning (and place structure) of the primitive predicates of each language. However, it is probably the case that all the various meanings that one has accommodated the other has also, just differently. The grammar and basic vocabulary of Lojban are baselined and will not change for some time and then only under the strongest of pressures. Loglan is officially still changing but has in fact been stable for several years. Although the readily available grammar programs for both languages are not the most up-to-date, they are enough to use for many detailed comparisons, with the expectation being that significant differences in grammar will appear only in rather remote and complex structures. The case of vocabulary comparison is less certain, but it seems likely that fairly regular, if not automatic, correspondences can be made between the two languages, probably more easily from Loglan to Lojban than the reverse.