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Re: [lojban] Baseline statement



At 12:45 AM 12/5/02 +1100, Nick Nicholas wrote:
Also, calling for broader input on the statement than a vote is legit;
if a non-trivial number of Lojbanists feel we should try and convoke a
special meeting on this, then that's certainly an option worth
considering.

Only as a last resort. A special meeting would be extremely difficult to convene, and because of non-on-line members who neither know about nor necessarily agree with the shift towards on-line meetings, would be discriminatory.

Likewise, if the board needs to make statements of
clarification or expansion, let it.

The Board likewise has difficulties operating on-line, as we've discovered in the last 2 months. We can overcome those difficulties, but not necessarily in a timely manner wrt the voting on the policy.

Yes, the board is trusted with day
to day running, but if the board was collectively possessed by aliens,
and said tomorrow Lojbanists must all switch to Solresol immediately, I
think some here would want the opportunity to get a broader vote on the
proposal before July...

They might want to, but they would have trouble doing so. This is not a statement of desireability; merely that we have a cumbersome system. I wrote the bylaws to be cumbersome, so as to prevent individuals or factions from taking over. A possessed Board could do what you suggest, but the members in July could boot the whole crowd. Actions can be taken quickly if really needed, but are checked by long-term constraints.

    Date: Fri, 29 Nov 2002 13:01:17 -0500
    From: Robert LeChevalier <lojbab@lojban.org>
Subject: Re: Re: [llg-members] Official Statement- LLG Board approves
new baseline policy

> At 08:20 AM 11/29/02 -0500, Pierre Abbat wrote:
>> I don't use the TLI alternate orthography, so when I write {srutio},
>> I don't
>> mean {sruti'o}.
>
> But if srutio is a valid word, then it has to be usable by those who
> DO you
> the alternate orthography.

Not an argument. That's the alternate orthography's problem; /srutiho/
is certainly a distinct string phonologically than /srutio/ as far as
Lojban is concerned, and it's specious to say otherwise. (And after the
recent kerfuffle, you should know well that arguments for Loglan
compatibility can backfire. :-) Pierre's responded to this well anyway.

What on earth is the status of the alternate orthography, anyway, that
it should constrain Lojban phonotactics?

Part of the existing baseline. Everything in CLL is part of that baseline, including the reservation of specific experimental provisions (which are therefore "official experiments").

 --- I always thought it was as
unofficial as the Tengwar and Estrangela orthographies.  And it is
mentioned in the same breath as Tengwar in CLL --- and under the
heading "oddball orthographies".

It is non-standard but officially recognized, as is the Tengwar. Because the baseline was adopted on the book and not merely the grammar, and because people have been treating the book as having scriptural standing in Lojbanic matters, means that things mentioned in CLL have inherent standing that is higher than things not mentioned in CLL.

Exigencies of the Loglan orthography
constrain Lojban no more than exigencies of the Cyrillic orthography:
fix the orthography, not the language.

Fixing the orthography is a baseline change.

Give me a statement in the present baseline

Which policy version of the present baseline? That is why we have just done a new policy statement. The new policy statement has CLL as part of the baseline and in general defines the baseline in terms of specific documents. Earlier statements were thought to be ambiguous between whether it was the documents or the concepts that were baselined, which was one of the issues that led to the new statement (remember the issue over translations)

1996 Members meeting:
Replacement AMENDMENT:  To baseline the contents of the
> Reference Grammar as of December 31, 1996, and all else as of June 30,
> 1997. - PASSED.

1997 Members meeting:
>      MOVED:  That LLG accept the reference grammar as submitted to the
> printer as the embodiment of the December 31st baseline - PASSED.

From the new statement:
The actual baseline and freeze initially will be on the English language
text.  Translations of baseline materials to other languages as well as
enhanced English definitions may be added to the baseline at a later date
having been reviewed for consistency; translations need not be literal
translations of the English.  Translation of the baseline documents is
encouraged, whether or not the translation is intended to be reviewed for
formal incorporation into the baseline.  See the policy below on LLG
support for baseline compliance.

Nick:
 that explicitly says the
Loglan orthography is more important than the Cyrillic in deciding what
are allowed word shapes.

It isn't. Both are alternates to the standard orthography, and both are part of the baseline design.

From the text:
It does not represent any changes to the standard Lojban phonology; it is simply a representation of the same phonology using a different written form.

 Your aesthetic judgement on srutio is no more
binding on this issue than And's aesthetic distaste of apostrophes.
(And provide a language-internal argument, please; if the issue truly
is rapproachment, I dunno, Loglanise srutio as sruti&ograve; or
something. It's not like there's that many such strings to begin with.)

I did not think I was arguing on personal aesthetic grounds, and in fact on most Lojban issues I am unaware of what my personal aesthetic stance is. My argument is based on historical policy. Historically in the community, type IV fu'ivla have been disparaged and in questions about the boundaries between fu'ivla space and everything else, fu'ivla have been restricted rather than spend a lot of time looking for ways to maximize it. This history has not been my sole doing, but extends back into the TLI era.

And I find it incredible that anyone with any sense of Lojban will hear
IPA [srutjo] and think that's a lujvo. [tj]? That ain't Lojban. You
don't get a more clear signal of fu'ivla-hood. (Or are you going to go
back to the primacy of writing --- and you an unabashed evolutionist!)

I'm not a fan of the primacy of writing, but the orthographies were defined as part of the baseline, and Lojban is by design criteria audiovisually isomorphic. The alternate orthographies are clearly of lesser import than the standard, but they do have some import, which means that they constrain situations which might be ambiguous otherwise.

Since there is ambiguity, the byfy could decide that the alternate orthography is broken, and do a Techfix. Or something else. Or nothing.

lojbab


--
lojbab                                             lojbab@lojban.org
Bob LeChevalier, President, The Logical Language Group, Inc.
2904 Beau Lane, Fairfax VA 22031-1303 USA                    703-385-0273
Artificial language Loglan/Lojban:                 http://www.lojban.org