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RE: [lojban] The Pleasures of goi (was: zipf computations & experimental cmavo
On Thu, 27 Sep 2001, Craig wrote:
> > >>> Rob Speer <rob@twcny.rr.com> 09/26/01 10:17pm >>>
> >> #On Wed, Sep 26, 2001 at 04:57:08PM -0400, John Cowan wrote:
> >> #> Rob Speer wrote:
> >> #> >(For those who don't see the problem with symmetry: names are
> assignable.
> >> #> >Pro-sumti are assignable. What gets assigned if you say {la djan. goi
> >> #> >ko'a}?)
> >> #>
> >> [1]
> >> #> If you know what ko'a means, then la djan. is defined to mean whatever
> >> #> ko'a means.
> >> [2]
> >> #> If you know what la djan. means, then ko'a is defined to mean whatever
> >> #> la djan. means.
> >> [3]
> >> #> If you don't know what either means, then they mean the same, but
> *what*
> >> #> they mean will arrive in future.
> >> [4]
> >> #> If you know what both mean, and they already mean the same thing, the
> >> #> goi-phrase is unnecessary.
> >> [5]
> >> #> If you know what both mean, and they mean different things, *bzzzzzt*,
> >> #> semantic error.
> >> #>
> >> #> This is called "unification" in Prolog.
> >> #
> >> #Hmm. That actually makes sense. I think I'll stop touting asymmetrical
> goi.
> >> #I suggest you put that on the Wiki, too, because I don't think it's
> clarified
> >> #anywhere else.
> >>
> >> I reject symmetric goi because:
> >>
> >> (1) Even if ko'a has already been assigned a meaning, you may want to
> reassign
> >> a different meaning to ko'a
>
>
>
> >ko'a goi la djan. .i li'o .i la fred. goi ko'a
>
> >You wish to interpret this as "John = Fred", instead of a reassignment?
> >bi'u In usage we've been interpreting it as reassignment.
>
> Where? "Syntactically, ``goi la .alis.'' is a relative phrase (relative
> phrases are explained in Chapter 8). Semantically, it says that ``ko'a'' and
> ``la .alis.'' refer to the same thing, and furthermore that this is true
> because ``ko'a'' is being defined as meaning ``la .alis.''." That comes out
> of the refgram, chapter 7, section 5. If we define ko'a to mean Fred, and we
> define ko'a to mean John also, then we could be saying that the two
> definitions are interchangable (so John = Fred),
da'o wipes all variables, so we need a way to reassign just one, right?
or, less usefully (and
> therefore not the interpretation I would advocate) that ko'a can mean either
> John or Fred, and you have to glork which one it means.
What a horrid alternative! No way!
> >no'u probably works like you think goi already does:
>
> >ko'a goi la djan. .i li'o .i la fred. no'u ko'a
> >ko'a is John. Fred is John.
>
>
> Yes, that is how goi works.
>
> >> #(Incidentally, I don't need 2 copies of each e-mail - just reply to the
> list.)
> >>
> >> Everyone is entitled to a vice. This is John's.
>
>
> >I'm afraid John's vice is that he likes to keep the mailing list
> >configured so that such duplicate mails are the default, requiring extra
> >steps to overcome.
>
> Consider the alternative. Suppose John made ''reply'' go to the list; it can
> do a lot more damage to send persoanl comments to a couple hundred people
> than for one person to get two copies of a mail - in which case the can
> delete one. However, I do agree that people should only reply to the list,
> as I am doing now.
How often are private replies sent? And if you are sending private
material it behooves you, the one at risk of embarrassment, to protect
yourself by double-checking the mail address.
--
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even that's not true.
Sami ul-Haq, Osama bin Laden's closest friend in Pakistan, runs the
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