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Re: [lojban] prescription & description (was: RE: Re: a new kind of fundamentalism



At 02:51 PM 10/5/02 +0100, And Rosta wrote:
The crucial case is Lojban analogues of statements of the form
"X is (not) Standard English", which to people who do not ordinarily
speak Std E may feel like prescriptions. It is statements like this
that Lojbab calls 'prescription'.

Lojban "prescription" to me is any statement about how the language works or should work that is not based on specific experience that it HAS worked that way (when used by competent users of the language). I would distinguish this from "speculation" ("what would/might it mean if X were said in Y context", or the more common "how would/might I say Z" (for non-Lojban expression Z).

The primary place where people run into the prescriptive/descriptive dichotomy is in a dictionary.

A prescriptive dictionary would define the words in accordance with the language design, and not care whether the language has actually been used that way. A descriptive dictionary would avoid including any word without an actual usage cite, and the definition is interpolated from that actual usage. (In the case of lujvo, this would mean that most lujvo would have only 1 or 2 place; jvajvo are inherently prescriptive.)

A descriptive dictionary would include definitions that covered actual usage even if they don't match the prescription. xruti would therefore be polysemous, having xorxes's place structure as well as the standard one. Fully descriptive would merely say which was used more, not that one was considered "standard". A prescriptive dictionary of Lojban would never show polysemy, because Lojban words are not supposed to display same.

Since the Lojban design avoided prescribing semantics; I am not much bothered by semantics discussions, except when they might actually contradict some wording used in the baseline documents (including CLL). By policy I can rule all such semantics pronouncements as "speculations", as defined above.

Such statements are usually
descriptive yet are not usually based directly on usage. In practise,
descriptive statements about a language are hardly ever based on usage.

I don't think that is true for dictionaries.

But it's here that the applicability to Lojban breaks down. For
one thing, Lojban does not have a body of accomplished speakers;
we are all learners of a foreign language.

Which is precisely why we are not ready to move from prescription to description. There is not yet enough usage to "let usage decide" most questions.

For another thing,
the question of which dialect of Lojban is 'Standard Lojban' is
not settled,

Any dialect that strictly matches the baseline documents is "standard" regardless of its semantics properties OTHER THAN what is defined in the baseline documents.

And I sometimes say "You should use sentences whose meaning is
the same as the meaning you intend to communicate". But none of
these sorts of statement dominate the discussions that Lojbab
calls 'prescriptive'.

I don't know that I've called any discussion "prescriptive". Discussion isn't by nature prescriptive.

lojbab

--
lojbab                                             lojbab@lojban.org
Bob LeChevalier, President, The Logical Language Group, Inc.
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Artificial language Loglan/Lojban:                 http://www.lojban.org