From sentto-44114-17576-1039102914-lojban-in=lojban.org@returns.groups.yahoo.com Thu Dec 05 08:10:37 2002 Received: with ECARTIS (v1.0.0; list lojban-list); Thu, 05 Dec 2002 08:10:37 -0800 (PST) Received: from n34.grp.scd.yahoo.com ([66.218.66.102]) by digitalkingdom.org with smtp (Exim 4.05) id 18Jya2-0007O7-02 for lojban-in@lojban.org; Thu, 05 Dec 2002 08:10:26 -0800 X-eGroups-Return: sentto-44114-17576-1039102914-lojban-in=lojban.org@returns.groups.yahoo.com Received: from [66.218.67.197] by n34.grp.scd.yahoo.com with NNFMP; 05 Dec 2002 15:41:54 -0000 X-Sender: opoudjis@optushome.com.au X-Apparently-To: lojban@yahoogroups.com Received: (EGP: mail-8_2_3_0); 5 Dec 2002 15:41:53 -0000 Received: (qmail 50606 invoked from network); 5 Dec 2002 15:41:53 -0000 Received: from unknown (66.218.66.216) by m4.grp.scd.yahoo.com with QMQP; 5 Dec 2002 15:41:53 -0000 Received: from unknown (HELO mail018.syd.optusnet.com.au) (210.49.20.176) by mta1.grp.scd.yahoo.com with SMTP; 5 Dec 2002 15:41:53 -0000 Received: from optushome.com.au (c17180.brasd1.vic.optusnet.com.au [210.49.155.40]) by mail018.syd.optusnet.com.au (8.11.1/8.11.1) with ESMTP id gB5Ffpj14424 for ; Fri, 6 Dec 2002 02:41:51 +1100 To: lojban@yahoogroups.com Message-Id: <12A8B59C-0868-11D7-9FC7-003065D4EC72@optushome.com.au> X-Mailer: Apple Mail (2.548) From: Nick Nicholas X-Yahoo-Profile: opoudjis MIME-Version: 1.0 Mailing-List: list lojban@yahoogroups.com; contact lojban-owner@yahoogroups.com Delivered-To: mailing list lojban@yahoogroups.com Precedence: bulk Date: Fri, 6 Dec 2002 02:41:51 +1100 Subject: [lojban] More stuff Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII X-archive-position: 3075 X-ecartis-version: Ecartis v1.0.0 Sender: lojban-list-bounce@lojban.org Errors-to: lojban-list-bounce@lojban.org X-original-sender: opoudjis@optushome.com.au Precedence: bulk Reply-to: lojban-list@lojban.org X-list: lojban-list 1. Message: 7 Date: Mon, 2 Dec 2002 18:37:34 -0600 From: Jordan DeLong Subject: Re: Specific example of Sapir-Whorf in English OR How Lojban made me think more clearly > I use big-endian in english, but lojban's specified (I think? I > only remember this from nick/robin's lessons; dunno what, if anything, > the book says) to use little endian. A lot of this is lore, encoded in Bob's draft textbook, and in members' decisions passed in '92 or something. I don't know whether this stuff counts as baseline. I think the BPFK can also reconsider such matters if they're outside the present baseline (i.e. CLL). And lore itself is repealable; the draft textbook advocated 12 hr time, and when I raised the issue for Lojban For Beginners last year, the overwhelming consensus was 24 hr time (to a large extent because we had no elegant way of combining numerical times with AM/PM, and the cmene approach advocated in the draft textbook didn't look like it could deal with minutes.) Whether the BPFK need bother with this kind of issue, I'm not sure. Maybe this stuff should not be baselined one way or the other. We can debate this, maybe even now... Adam proposed ma'i for specifying which kind of possible world is being referred to. I had in mind ti'o as the metalinguistic marker for this kind of thing. Look it up in CLL and tell me if you think it can fly. 2. ka'enai My current position on ka'enai: we should not change it, because that exceeds our mandate, as it would cause a major grammar change. I believe it would be a change for the better, and I think the semantic concern Jordan raises would be easily resolvable: contradictory negation with connectives, scalar everywhere where scale is possible. But on both counts, it's too late for this to be politically feasible. Whether in an ideal world (we get put on the time ship and go back to 1988) it would be desirable or not. 3. Message: 20 Date: Mon, 2 Dec 2002 20:06:31 -0600 From: Jordan DeLong Subject: Re: Why we should cancel the vote or all vote NO (was RE: Official Statement- LLG Board approves new baseline policy > We assign lau'oi to selma'o LAU, with the exact meaning of lau. > We assign tei'oi to selma'o TEI, with the exact meaning of tei. > > A statement is made that "lau'oi" and "tei'oi" should be used in > stead of "lau" and "tei", because lau and tei may be reclaimed in > the distant future for their monosyllabicness. > > However, since no one but me supports this more moderate approach > to this, and the whole point would be to try to make both you and > everyone else happy about future Zipf possibilites, I'm pretty much > going to have to abandon it and go with everyone else in the view > that we should not worry about Zipf at all. I like it, and would be willing to consider it in a very few cases of cmavo (such as these). I won't say anything stronger than that now, because I don't have a mandate to. If that helps. :-) The following is my personal opinion: As to tei/foi specifically (see, one more monosyllable), Unicode concretely says that tei .ebu .akut.bu foi decomposes as .ebu .akut.bu (that e acute is two characters). I don't think the sky will cave in if we say that in Lojban, all composed characters are read out as their constituent parts, with diacritic after character. We adopt one way of doing things rather than admitting complete freedom? Yeah, so? We do that all the time in Lojban: it's called having a syntax. If you insist that e-acute is to be considered a single character, then call it explicitly .e'akut.bu . If you want to be frisky about whether diacritics go before or after the letter (which tei/foi allow), I say, to hell with you. Lojban enforces precedence like there's no tomorrow in MEX; and it's to go all hippy with letterals? You can say either {.ebu .akut.bu} or {e'akut.bu}; you don't need to also be able to say both {tei .ebu ,akutbu foi} and {tei ,akutbu .ebu foi}. What possible point does such freedom serve? As for digraphs, I'd much rather {.a'ebu} than {tei .abu .ebu foi} for the ash (æ)... This means that I think tei/foi are pointless, and don't mind what happens to them. I support Jordan's take of deprecating tei and counterproposing tei'au or whaatever, because it is gradualist; it's the only way I can see to uphold the baseline and still nudge the offending cmavo out of the way. If everyone on the BPFK decided to toss this section of the baseline, I'd go along with it too; but since there will be fundies there, I doubt they will. {lau} is marginally more useful, but only marginally. Punct is not so frequent that the world would cave in if {lau} had an extra syllable. We've never used {lau} the one place where punctuation lerfu have been used extensively --- http://www.lojban.org/wiki/index.php/Keyboard%20key%20names . I believe {lau} is trying to solve a problem that isn't there. So the case for the sanctity of tei, foi, lau is *only* the case for the existing baseline stability. They haven't been used, and I don't see them filling much of a niche. They're not the cmavo I'd want to make a stand on... end private opinion. And's said pretty much the same as my last para, I see. 4. Message: 3 Date: Tue, 3 Dec 2002 02:47:53 -0000 From: "And Rosta" Subject: nature of debate (was: RE: Re: Why we should cancel the vote or all vote NO (was RE: Official Statement- LLG Board approves new baseline policy > So debates that are not purely ideological need two phases, ideally. > A first phase for all the arguments to be raised. And a second > phase to force people to reach some kind of consensus position. > Nick has got the second phase well-thought out, but I wanted to > urge him to give the first phase a bit more scope. I hadn't clicked you meant the BPFK not the board. i admit the current statement is kneejerk guillotining discussion, at least at the outset. I can accept that the statement should also include a record of past dispute (X said A, Y said B. These were the reasons. This instance of usage supports A, this B), as well as a recommendation of a new meaning. I don't want substantial new discussion, but if and when it happens, a shepherd is a very good idea. I think in the first instance, the shepherd should be the proposer of the first definition. Since they've gone through the corpus and all prior discussion, they are the expert on the topic by definition, whether their take on the issue prevails or not. Not putting this on the wiki yet, because I want to see if others think this will encourage things to drag out unnecessarily, 5. Message: 5 Date: Tue, 3 Dec 2002 03:16:39 -0000 From: "And Rosta" Subject: factionalization (was: RE: Re: Why we should cancel the vote or all vote NO (was RE: Official Statement- LLG Board approves new baseline policy > Robin: >> Factionalization pisses me off > > How would you like things to work? Am I right in thinking that you > would like everybody to reach consensus, by the minority abandoning > its dissent for the sake of the greater good? I think this is what > Lojbab yearns for. Eh, I'd prefer it too; but consensus won out over majority vote, and I now agree with it. This doesn't always or necessarily mean majority yields. It can also mean watering down and compromise. Factions exist; I define 'em, I defend them. We have different interests in Lojban, we don't want them marginalised. Bob may have defined Lojban to test SW, and uses that to justify his rejection of defining any semantics. But if 90% of the community want a semantics, they prevail (as Bob admits, which is why he's consenting to a BPFK in the first place.) And has no right to ban xod from pursuing SWism; xod has no right to tell And to abandon jboske. I don't even have a problem with individuals tinkering; I have a problem with it becoming politically dominant in the community, to the point of endangering language continuity. (In fact, in yet another one of those reversals that Bob has been gracing us with of late :-) , he considers Lojbanist tinkering to be legitimate in providing us with Lojban Mark II --- as long as it happens after we're all dead or something :-) .) We must arrive at a common standard. But we do so, I believe, by acknowledging we want different things, and seeing how we can work our way around that; not by suppressing or ignoring that difference. But that isn't quite parliamentary democracy either. Parliamentary democracy works by majority rule, not consensus, after all. Or maybe I'm just naive. :-) We'll see... OK, I'm going to stop defending And here, because I don't want Robin whaling on my ass. :-) Look, we gotta work together. If I have my way, I'll get And and xod and Jay and Robin and Jordan and everyone with something to say into the same place, and we'll all produce a dictionary. That means we accept there are constraints on what we do. It also means we accept each other's bonafides. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^ Dr Nick Nicholas. French/Italian, "Rode like foam on the river of pity University of Melbourne Turned its tide to strength http://www.opoudjis.net Healed the hole that ripped in living" nickn@unimelb.edu.au - Suzanne Vega, Book Of Dreams ________________________________________________________________________ __ To unsubscribe, send mail to lojban-unsubscribe@onelist.com Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/