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pa remna
>> This bothers me. I haven't thought it out thoroughly, but perhaps it is
>> desireable to have "pa remna" = "pa lo remna" be a subselection from
>> remna which makes no claim about other members of remna.
>
>That's what {su'opa} is for, isn't it? You are saying that you want
>numbers to behave as in English and not be the exact number but a lower
>limit.
>
>> This would be
>> a distinct difference from having "lo remna" = "da poi remna".
>
>I don't understand this conclusion.
I am not saying how I "want" numbers to behave in Lojban. I am saying
that such behavior is a plausible reason to distinguish "lo" from "da
poi". The intent was that "lo" be veridical and talk about real
properties. The intent was not that it be logically analyzable into a
bound variable like "da poi" is. If it is USEFUL (and consistent with
usage), I have no objection to "lo" interacting with quantifiers
differently (in logical terms) than "da poi"
We thus have a canonical sentence
le jubme cu se tuple vo da
The table is belegged by exactly 4 things.
We don't *have* to say that
le jubme cu se tuple ci lo tuple
violates the first sentence. Because there probably has been very
little usage that forces the issue.
I am not saying I am in favor of such a view. I am saying that if it
solves some of the open issues, and also conveniently comes up with a
distinction between "lo" and "da poi" (since it grates on me to have
them equated) I could be convinced to support it.
And:
>> >I thought {re prenu} was to be interpreted as: "There exists an x that
>> >is a person and there exists a y that is a person and x is not equal to
>> >y:" and whatever was claimed was claimed for x and for y.
>> >But I think And's interpretation is better: "There is a set of two
>> >persons, such that for every x of that set:" whatever.
>> This sounds exactly like "ro lo re prenu".
>
>{ro lo re prenu} means {lohi prenu} is a remei, doesn't it?
>
>I had been saying to Jorge that many intuitive uses of {re prenu} in
>fact meant {ro lo re lo prenu}, so that it might be better to have {re
>[lo] prenu} interpreted as {ro lo re lo prenu} and {lo prenu} as {ro lo
>suo lo prenu}.
My error - I had meant ro lo re lo prenu.
I could live with re prenu meaning "ro lo re lo prenu", I think. or
maybe even "ro le re lo prenu" a specific but veridical twosome. The
question is whether we want "re prenu" to be specific/definite or not.
"ro lo re lo prenu" is quite non-specific/non-definite.
>> > ci remna cu se tuple re tuple
>> > 3 people have 2 legs?
>> > vs.
>> > re tuple cu tuple ci remna
>> > 2 legs are legs for 3 people?
>>
>> First, doesn't the current goatleg ruling mean that these both mean
>> "there are exactly three people and exactly two legs such that
>> each leg is leg of each person"? So (a) both mean the same thing,
>> and (b) both are false.
>
>They both mean that under one interpretation. I don't want to call it
>the traditional interpretation because I'm not sure anyone ever gave
>this rule. There is nothing about this in the grammar papers.
The goatleg rule is clear in the case of quantifier+da-series.
Nothing is solid with "quantifier+lo" till we decide (and agree) what
"lo" means. Right now, every posting I read that mentions the word "lo"
feels like quicksand. And when you or Jorge try to put things in
logical form, which I am far from adept at comprehending (especially
with 2 kids playing noisy computer games in the room with me), the
morass gets even stickier.
lojbab