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[lojban] Re: ka'enai (was: Re: A question on the new baseline policy)
cu'u la xod.
> On Mon, 2 Dec 2002, And Rosta wrote:
>
>> Anyway, if the conservatives won, I wonder how
>> many "ka'enai" users would stop using it. Not many, I suspect.
>> Maybe Nick, depending on his mood on a given day. So you're likely
>> to end up with a baseline that is followed only in those aspects
>> that command intrinsic respect.
> A very interesting and worthy point. If the BF's decisions will be
> ignored
> by significant fractions of users, why should it bother making them?
> This
> is a case of the leaders seeing where the people are going, running
> out in
> front of them, and then claiming to lead them.
Zinger upon zinger; in all seriousness, this community is privileged to
have both of you in it.
I think ka'enai will be a litmus for Lojban; as someone on the wiki
said (was it Robin.CA?), ka'enai will be the Lojban "ain't". We have
two clashing imperatives: analogy, which is how natural languages work,
and unambiguity, which is how engelangs work. They conflict.
Assuming that Jordan and John are right, and that ka'enai is hopelessly
vague:
I think the grammar needs to be swayed by fundamentalist and formalist
criteria --- no change unless broken (where 'broken' does not just mean
'inconvenient', but 'contradictory' or 'ambiguous'). Real human beings
don't talk like robots, you'll say, they'll want to make the analogy.
Accepted. And real human beings will not abide by 100% of the current
Lojban grammar, either. The grammar *was* designed for robots, and
represents a standard which people will not necessarily speak
rigorously. i frankly don't see the point in the machine grammar
continuously morphing to keep track with the natural evolution of the
language (to the extent it happens): an unambiguous syntax is a selling
point in its own right, and spoken Lojban will always butt against it.
So let's leave the grammar alone. The grammar is stupid in many, many
ways, whether this is an instance or not; but I don't regard us as
having a mandate to make it more convenient, learnable, or sensible ---
just to prevent any ambiguity. I will rejoice if people 'subvert the
baseline' on this one; but throwing this kind of thing open for
prescription now is just too risky, and I don't see the point. Let
Lojban have its "ain't": if you forestall one instance of people
generalising away from the syntax, you won't be able to forestall them
all.
And is quite right to characterise me as a weathervane. Whether I'm
developing a coherent ideology yet, I can't really tell. Maybe I just
won't.
The business of the leaders is to run in the same general direction as
everyone else; the point being, I suppose, that the leaders diagnose
what that direction is, because the population running often can't
tell. That's why I preferred your formulation of 'Standard Lojban'. But
there are a couple of other imperatives the BPFK needs to follow first
--- fundamentalism and formalism-lite: a commitment to unambiguousness,
at least, even if not outright formalisation. (The 'aims of the
language' that the board statement speaks of.) Sometimes, people
haven't been running in that direction at all. In this kind of
situation, though, when the formalism-lite imperative is brought up,
people usually accept it and change their usage (e.g. ce'u). I'm not
saying naturalism-lite doesn't achieve this either (past usage all
other things being equal --- e.g. vo'a).
---
DR NICK NICHOLAS. nickn@unimelb.edu.au
FRENCH & ITALIAN, UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA.
In Athens, news spreads fast: they know everything as soon as it
happens,
sometimes before it happens, and often without it happening at all.
--- Jean Psichari, _My Voyage_. http://www.opoudjis.net
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