From nicholas@uci.edu Tue Sep 18 17:04:15 2001 Return-Path: X-Sender: nicholas@uci.edu X-Apparently-To: lojban@yahoogroups.com Received: (EGP: mail-7_3_2_2); 19 Sep 2001 00:04:15 -0000 Received: (qmail 63405 invoked from network); 19 Sep 2001 00:04:14 -0000 Received: from unknown (10.1.10.26) by l7.egroups.com with QMQP; 19 Sep 2001 00:04:14 -0000 Received: from unknown (HELO e4e.oac.uci.edu) (128.200.222.10) by mta1 with SMTP; 19 Sep 2001 00:04:14 -0000 Received: from localhost (nicholas@localhost) by e4e.oac.uci.edu (8.9.3/8.9.3) with ESMTP id RAA29998; Tue, 18 Sep 2001 17:04:14 -0700 (PDT) X-Authentication-Warning: e4e.oac.uci.edu: nicholas owned process doing -bs Date: Tue, 18 Sep 2001 17:04:14 -0700 (PDT) X-Sender: To: Cc: Nick NICHOLAS Subject: Re: [lojban] META : Who is everyone (and what are they saying) Message-ID: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII From: Nick NICHOLAS X-Yahoo-Message-Num: 10852 cu'u la lojbab. >Before the recent controversy, I would have said "ckaji le ka daplu" (no >man is characterized by island-ness) but I'm not sure how this fits with >the hardliner ka. *sigh* It fits perfectly, and the point of the whole debate was to make sure it does. ckaji leka daplu = ckaji leka ce'u daplu. That you should try simsa, dunli, or mintu is actually a good outcome, as far as I'm concerned, not a bad one. After all, though humans are connected by society, they are not physically contiguous the way the mainland is. The point of the saying is that people can *think* they are islands, but in a social sense. In a trivially spatial sense, of course we are still islands. And Lojban forces you to think about what is actually being meant. "Guns don't kill people; people kill people" doesn't work as a rhetorical figure in Lojban. (The reason why is left as an exercise.) I like that. -- == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == Nick Nicholas, Breathing I REJECT {gumri} nicholas@uci.edu (Lojban Wiki, Resurrected Gismu)