And Rosta wrote:
Robin.tr:..iesai From a linguistic point of view, it is exactly this potential tension between grammar and usage which would be interesting. to illustrate the point in a rather absurd way, I once ran a cyberpunk-style role-playing game in which Lojban was a lingua franca for geeks. The two Lojbanisms that really caught on amongst the players were "mabla" (correct usage) and "le do mamta cu gerku" (incorrect, in canonical Lojban).If I remember rightly, the key purpose in question was to have a language that was 'whorfianly neutral', so that usage could then be examined to see if there were any whorfian interferences from the L1. (Correct me if I'm wrong -- you're clearer on this than me.) But the Naturalist route wants to complete the creation process through usage, in which case there is inevitably going to be massive L1 interference, but not of an interesting sort, because it won't be counterposed to any defined whorfianly neutral grammar.If the grammar (in the linguistics sense, not the computing sense!) comes into being through usage, which is what the Naturalists wish to happen,then I don't see how there'd be a tension between grammar and usage. You might say there'd be a tension between the baselined component and the eventual grammar that evolves out of usage, but one's prediction is that the eventual grammar would be a fairly predictable melange of the baseline and L1 influences. If the prediction were borne out, then one would not feel terribly excited, since the obvious is seldom exciting. But you see things differently, so maybe you can explain a bit more.
I think the tension would be interesting to observe in a group committed to the baseline grammar. It might also be the case that the reverse occurs, with people preferring ways of putting things in Lojban that are as far removed from their natlang grammar as possible. I would also be interested in the possibility of non-natlang-influenced drift for functional reasons.
You have a point there, but I think it is an important shibboleth to maintain, at least for a while. I don't think it is possible for a language to be free of unmarked metaphor (though the richness and explicit nature of Lojban grammar at least tends to make such things as time less metaphorical). However, I think it's interesting to see how far you can go, and thee is also the practical communicative consideration that we should at least try and avoid culture-specific metaphor (and unless you're a prodigious polyglot, who can say what is not culture-specific?).I don't really get the point about "le do mamta cu gerku". Yes, it's unmarked figurative usage, but the deprecation of unmarked figurative usage is more a cultural shibboleth than a real part of Lojban. (it's certainly not part of Lojban grammar, and I don't think it's really much of an active element in Lojban culture either.)
With the "gerku" example, I don't know of any cultures where comparing someone to a dog would be a compliment, but they may exist (it wouldn't be hard to imagine a culture which would interpret "le do mamta cu gerku" as an implication that your mother was very faithful).
robin.tr --"We do not imprison ourselves with laws, or impoverish ourselves with money" - Iain Banks
Robin Turner IDMYO Bilkent Universitesi Ankara 06533 Turkey www.bilkent.edu.tr/~robin