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Re: fancu
la pycyn cusku di'e
>Sticking with the assertive form, "John knows whether you
> have stopped beating your wife," would, in the case where the
presuppositions
> are not met, mean that John knows that the presuppositions are not
met, that
> the correct answer is {na'i}.
I'm not convinced. Consider this:
"Does John know whether you have stopped beating your wife?"
1- "Yes, he does. He knows that I don't even have a wife."
2- "No, there's nothing for him to know about it. He knows
that I don't even have a wife."
I find (2) more realistic. If "I don't even have a wife" was
one of the members of the whether-answer-set, then (1) should
be the right answer.
In Lojban, assuming {na'i} is not a member of the set of
answers, we could say:
la djan djuno no du'u xukau mi co'u darxi lo mi speni
iki'ubo no du'u xukau mi co'u darxi lo mi speni cu jetnu
"John knows no 'whether I have stopped beating my wife'
because there isn't any 'whether I have stopped beating
my wife' to know."
(Of course {na'i} is a perfectly ok illocutionary answer,
but the set of answers involved in indirect questions has
to be the set of logical answers.)
mu'o mi'e xorxes