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Re: thoughts on numerical language
--- In lojban@y..., pycyn@a... wrote:
> In a message dated 12/4/2001 8:52:28 PM Central Standard Time,
> thinkit8@l... writes:
>
>
> > I'd think of it as a superset. If you define something
numerically,
> > you can do both the language stuff, and the illustration, which
is
> > not a "linguistic description". Sure you can do that now, but
you
> > get rough boundries between them. A rough example is binary
> > encoding in newsgroup texts...it's a hack at best.
> >
>
> Your binary code as a superset of a language. Not quite, since it
does not
> now contain the language as a part, only a code for it. Again,
you are being
> remarkably opaque in what you are talking about. Do you mean a
language or
> do you mean a code. If you mean a language, then the pictures
have no place
> in it; if you meqn a code, then the linguistic stuff you've been
throwing
> around have no place. Apparently.
> A set of principles seems called for. What are you talking
about? What
> goals do you have in mind? How does your numerical whatzit proceed
toward
> those goals?
> What is a numerical language?
>
> This looks like material for LoCCan3 -- except for its negligible
connection
> with Lojban/Loglan.
The point is to see how one can be more expressive when talking in
binary. I have a pretty good idea of it in my head, but perhaps I'm
not articulating it well. When I get a general overview of how it's
put together, perhaps my purposes will be more clear.