In a message dated 7/1/2001 10:25:55 PM Central Daylight Time,
rob@twcny.rr.com writes: I'm not sure that there are any other attitudinals which would need to have a That is, of course, one part of several proposals -- even if most UI have only marginally different effects. So, under these suggestions, {da'i} dould still be used. Of course, I am not yet convinced that you need {da'i} in the sentence as opposed to {se sruma} or some such thing: is it really being posited on the spot (not by you, so {da'idai}) or are you merely reporting that someone posited it? In either case, more work needs to be done, clearly. In a message dated 7/2/2001 7:50:01 AM Central Daylight Time, a.rosta@dtn.ntl.com writes: . For example, although "I am happy I am not sure that I agree about the interpretation of {ui p}: I take the {ui} to be an imediate response to the present p, not a generalization or other form of projection, and I take that as being relatively clear in the book. Now, inserting the {ui} somewhere inside or at the end of p has been suggested as a way changing this force to something like what you suggest (among other things) but that is still in the proposal stage. <Ideally, I'd like to see a careful separation between attitudes to/emotions about a proposition, on the one hand, and, on the other hand, indications of whether P (or even not-P) is being asserted. Hoping, for example, seems to be made up of "P is desirable" and "I am not asserting that P is the case" (or perhaps something stronger like "I am asserting that I do not know that P is the case"). But one could have the assertives on their own without the attitude indicators, and one could combine desidertation with assertions ("P is desirable and is the case") and nonassertions (e.g. "mmm! me a millionaire" = "p is desirable (& may or may not be the case)"). Perhaps, then, a'o could be seen as shorthand for "ui ju'anai" or similar.> Again, while something like your unpacking of "hope" or {a'o} has been suggested, it has been countered by a number of cases of thinks hoped for but not pleasure generating and conversely. It is so far only a hypotheses that all (or any) of the projecting forms can be analyzed in this way (or that all or any of the 'simple emotions' have projective versions). <Has agreement been reached about the grammar of (3), though? That seems to be the key thing.> My 3)? Well, the Book sets it up one way, but there are proposals to change it, specifically to show whether the sentence is asserted or not. |