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[lojban] Re: About jboselkei reviews
However it came to pass, CLL10.19 (p. 243f) makes
it perfectly clear that {ka'e} is now exactly the
short version of {kakne}; the {cumki}-related
form is not even a possible interpretation.
Further, {nu'o} and {pu'i} are only peripherally
relevant to "possible" as opposed to "capable."
If I was involved in all this -- and I take your
word for that -- what ever happened to "is
necessary," which I surely would have insisted
upon along with "is possible." Since enither of
these are in the present system, I take it that
this discussion was about something altogether
different -- capability, in fact -- and that the
discussion of possibility and necessity either
never took place (unlikely if I was involved) or
was lost in the subsequent development. In any
case, the issue is what to do now and hopefully
the current revision work will get this all
corrected.
--- Bob LeChevalier <lojbab@lojban.org> wrote:
> John E Clifford wrote:
> > While I am not sure I agree with the
> arguments in
> > toto, I agree with at least a weak form of
> the
> > conclusion. There is no need for a modal
> version
> > of {kakne}.
>
> Ah, but ka'e isn't a modal version of kakne.
> At least it wasn't
> intended to be.
>
> The 4 modals of CAhA were things that you and I
> came up with together,
> as being a way to resolve the potential inanity
> of "potential"
> predicates. Remembering that in theory an
> unmarked bridi could refer to
> something that is only potentially true (I
> remember examples relating to
> ducks being potential swimmers, and paper being
> potentially flammable,
> in the timeless potential sense, even when the
> duck is nowhere near
> water and the paper is drenched.)
>
> With potential a valid form of unmarked bridi,
> we needed a way to
> explicitly mark bridi as to potentiality and
> actuality. You identified
> 4 possibilities, to which I mnemomically
> assigned ca'a, ka'e, nu'o, and
> pu'i. Any resemblance of those modalities to
> the bridi from which their
> cmavo were mnemonicized is not necessarily
> significant. If the
> keyphrase "innately capable of" is misleading
> people, please remember
> that, as with all keyphrase cmavo definitions,
> the purpose of that
> keyphrase was to have something unique but as
> short as possible to be
> typed in LogFlash. Just as with the keywords
> of the gismu, NONE of the
> keyphrases were EVER intended to serve as the
> primary definitions of the
> words (but then, we also expected that there
> would be a dictionary with
> proper definitions within a year or so, and
> that never happened). They
> were, however, baselined along with the cmavo
> list, and the lack of a
> real dictionary has led people to think of them
> as something other than
> what they are supposed to be.
>
> I'm hoping that one eventual outcome of the
> byfy work is that the
> keyphrases either disappear completely, or that
> they are returned to
> their intended mnemonic-of-meaning function,
> and cease to be definitional.
>
> > There further should be a modal version of
> {cumki}. It would be nice
> to convince
> > some higher power to shift {ka'e} in that way
> > (appearance notwithstanding).
>
> How would this cumki modal fit into the CAhA
> scheme you originally
> proposed, or is it really that the keyphrase
> for ka'e is poorly chosen
> and the pure potential modal should be closer
> to cumki in meaning than
> to kakne?
>
> lojbab
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