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Re: Binary Language
--- In lojban@y..., pycyn@a... wrote:
> In a message dated 12/24/2001 1:36:10 AM Central Standard Time,
> rob@t... writes:
>
>
> > How about concepts like "between" or
> > "combine" where the x2 and x3 are interchangeable? Or would you
simply
> > leave those out of your language?
> >
>
> Well, thinkit would say that "between" (and probably "combine") is
easy. "a
> is between b and c" is just "a is to the side of b with a to the
side of c"
> and if you said that this would allow all sorts of arrangements
where a is
> NOT between b and c, he would claim that those all required some
other
> condition but that "between" was the natural reading of the
simplest one. If
> you strike that down, then he may eventually be driven to the
place binarists
> usually end up, making arguments of pairs of objects -- ordered or
unordered
> as the need may be (and pairs of pairs or of a pair and an object,
and so on,
> as needed).
As I said, "between" would be a one argument verb. Try A between
(tag) B has location (tag) C has location. Since tags aren't
ordered anyway, this makes sense.
> thinkit:
> <It's just a matter of saying it differently. In this case, one
way
> is, man attempts to (sentence) man give book to cat (end sentence)
> (tag) thwarted by (sentence) dog take book from man. The sentence
I
> gave could have no other reasonable meaning than the man giving a
> book to a dog (assuming no other tags are given). The second
> mention of the book (in the tag) isn't even necessary>
>
> Well, but the first solution requires a way to make sentences into
arguments
> -- which ought to be interesting in this system -- and then a way
of saying
> that the man gave the book to the cat, which is just the original
problem
> again, not solved by saying that it is part of the solution to
some other
> problem (ditto that the dog takes the book from the man). I think
that
> dropping the second reference to the book requires a convention
that one
> probably does not want to use: that the missing argument is the
nearest
> extrasentential reference or the one in the same place or some
such. The
> exceptions will be more numerous than the cases and the
possibility for error
> rather large (e.g., taking the gap to mean there is nothing there -
- a very
> real case -- or that it is an unspecified something -- also a
real case).
> since there has to be something in the 2nd argument place, it
might as well
> be what is intended.
If there is a reasonable way you could be misunderstood, the option
is always there to use a reference.
> <It would just be a single true sentence. Man, dog, and book are
> identified as objects. >
>
> But it sure seems to be two sentences both of which (and more
beside, I
> think) have to be true for the intended meaning. If either part
fails then
> the whole fails: a clear case of conjunction, not subordination.
> HOW are the man, dog and book identified as arguments rather than
predicates?
> (Lord, your terminology is getting even me talking nonsense).
It's one sentence that has a sentence contained in it.