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Re: [lojban] Re: Some ideas/questions (long)



eye_onus@yahoo.com:
I take the above to mean that he wants to fix those exceptions in the language
that occur to 1) minimize the amount of needed gismu by turning unnecessary
gismu into lujvo (such as the the gismu for 'mother' being replaced by the
lujvo for 'woman type-of parent') 2) Making the place structures of similar
words match (for instance the words for 'angry' and 'sad') and 3) enable all
gismu to have easily discerned rafsi.

Each of these has been proposed dozens of times in the last 15 years, and in fact proposals based on each were implemented in the first half dozen years of the language. But it is way too late to even consider any further efforts of this sort. I attempted to retune the rafsi list to more effectively match usage in 1993, and the community reluctantly approved it with lots of dissent under the proviso of "never again".

 As far as the rafsi is concerned, I would think it would make sense to give
all gismu two rafsi, one of type CCV or CVV, and the other of type CVC, in
order to make it possible to combine any rafsi in any order (those gismu with
--C only rafsi cannot be at the end of a gismu, for instance) Also, it would
good to have a standard to make these two rafsi:

CVCCV:

CvCcV + CVCcv | CVcCv

CCVCV:

CcVcV + cCVCv | CcVCv

So, gismu's two rafsi would be:

gsu + gis | gim (probably 'gis')

gsu is not a permitted letter combination in Lojban.

The current list was selected using, I believe

CVCCV
C1V1C2C3V2

CVC:  C1V1C2 | C1V1C3
CVV:  C1V1V2
CCV: C2C3V2 and in a couple cases where a CCV was felt to be really important C1C2V1

CCVCV
C1C2V1C3V2

CVC:  C1V1C3 | C2V1C3
CVV:  C1V1V2 | C2V1V2
CCV:  C1C2V1

Where two words could use the same rafsi, we chose the word that was used in the most proposed lujvo needing that kind of rafsi (the set of proposed lujvo was not carefully weeded and in fact was as inclusive as possible of people's ideas, and usage at that point was relatively minimal; most of these proposals never made it into any wordlist).

 That is what I offering to help write a proposal on, and I think that if the
work was done on it, that it at least have a chance in commitee,

It would have no chance in committee, since there are two people in this household alone that would veto it sight unseen. It is not what we are looking for from the byfy. Nick as byfy chair has said that he also has little interest in change proposals that would make existing language usage invalid. The committee exists to define what has not been defined, resolve conflicts that have been identified, perhaps recognize significant usage that conflicts with the existing baselined prescription, and in very limited areas to consider "fixing what is broken", with "broken" generally being defined in terms of the fundamental purposes or design criteria of the language (none of which include "making a better language"). The latter is the lowest priority and it remains to be seen if any proposals at all will be accepted on those terms; if they are, they will likely only be accepted from people who have demonstrated deep knowledge of the language as it is through extensive usage over time - Jorge and Nick being among the few who qualify. A newcomer who cannot fairly fluently use the language that is, is not likely to be competent to identify something as being "broken".

though i am
not confident of it being accepted, merely because of the stubbornness of those
who've ben in the Lojban community a long time. ('It's always been like this,
and it works, why change it?'

That is only part of the argument. The other parts include "Change drives people away; people do not like to relearn stuff they have already learned. Make no changes that are not necessary", and "Every change to the language makes some prior written text invalid. People will not learn a language if there is nothing to read in it, and people will not write in the language if a change will make their writing unintelligible next week, next month or next year." There is also the weaker argument of avoiding change that is unnecessary, out of respect for language inventor James Cooke Brown; unnecessary change weakens the claim that this is the same language that he envisioned back in 1954 (we're coming up on the half century mark next year, and I'd love to say that the prescription of the language is complete before then).

But you are correct that I am stubborn on such matters, and I am not the only one. And in this arena alone do I assert any the benefit of any respect given to "founder privilege".

(The answer is 'Because this works better.'

That argument could be made indefinitely, and it begs a question that Lojban asks more effectively:
ma xagmau ma ma ma ma ...

Of course that's debatable, but we won't know unless the work on the proposal is done.))

If you want to debate it, do so in Lojban. Start by answering the above question. I'm sure you will get response if your Lojban is even minimally understandable.

There are far better ways to spend Lojban time. These kinds of proposals, and even debating these kinds of proposals are the sort of activity that leads to countless constructed language concepts and projects with almost none of them having any speakers other than the person who concocted them (if even they speak it). There is a community of people who are seeking an ever "better" language. This isn't it, and this community overlaps that one only minimally.

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