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[lojban-beginners] Re: language useful?



MorphemeAddict@wmconnect.com wrote:
In a message dated 2005-02-14 5:23:46 AM Eastern Standard Time, Bruce Webber
bruce@brucewebber.com via ecartis@digitalkingdom.org writes:
 >> For a language to be useful, it's structure must match the structure of
the world being described.

That's simply the most amazingly false statement I've seen in a long time.
*No* language structure matches or *can* match the structure of the world being described. It's comparing apples and oranges; they're totally different, incompatible structures.
Having said that though, can you support it with examples?

I'm sorry, I shouldn't have written "match". I don't mean that a language will be exactly like what it describes - you are correct; that is impossible. "Similar" is a better word.

If the structure of the language (in a particular area) is similar to the structure of the world (in the corresponding area) then the language will be useful. One will be able to make reasonably accurate predictions, for example.

For example, a language describing human health in terms of four bodily humours (blood, phlegm, black bile and yellow bile) will not be as useful as a language that includes microbes, immune responses, etc.

Of course, similarity of structure, in terms of accuracy and completeness, is a matter of degree. Sometimes we want many details; other times we want to leave out details. The usefulness of the map (language) depends on our purpose. This is where levels of abstraction come into play. At higher levels of abstraction, more detail is left out, and the language utterances become more general.

Sometimes the language structure can be misleading. Because "heat" is a noun, it was natural to think that heat is some sort of substance ("caloric"). Because we have the words "body" and "mind", it is tempting to think there are two separate entities, when there aren't. These are still useful words; the key is being aware of the limitations and role of language.

Hopefully this clarifies my statements. :)

Bruce