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Re: [lojban] the future of Lojban's leadership



On 5/22/2014 10:26 AM, 'John E Clifford' via lojban wrote:
Nice to know that the project, despite all that has been said about it,
is just writing adequate definitions for cmavo

That was how we started. Of course, some have added their own goals to that basic one, including a switch from YACC to some other kind of grammar specification that I do not understand (YACC was hard enough for me to grasp).

-- excluding, for now, I
suppose, all the experimental ones,

Correct. If some of the experimental ones were worth adding, that would be a later phase, and should including assigning them to non-experimental cmavo.

but keeping all the established
highly superfluous ones (cultural neutrality does NOT require that we
can do anything any language can do)

It doesn't require it, but that is one possible way to achieve it, and probably one of the less problematic ones when the work is being done mostly by monolingual English speakers (as was the case for the first few years). It also can make translation easier, and offered some possibility at increasing the use of the language for other academic linguistic applications (At one time, I had the interest of Alexis Manaster-Ramer in possibly using Lojban as an interlingual glossing language (rather than English) for linguistics papers. The Nootka lujvo-sentence I created is one example of this.)

and not changing the grammar to get rid of the redundant ones.

Likewise. Redundancy will not truly be recognizable until we have numerous fluent speakers from multiple native language backgrounds, and using (or trying to use) the parts of the language that have potentially redundant features. (for example, very little has been done with Mex which undoubtedly has redundancies because we were trying to encompass anything that anyone ever expresses in some kind of formula, including the adaptation of non-numerical terminology (how many are in an exaltation of doves)

The joker here seems to be the notion of an
adequate definition, since all these words have definitions and even
some commentary,

They may have that now, but they did not have it in 2000, and it isn't even close to existing in the current CLL. The BPFK format was devised as a way to assemble the information needed to form an adequate definition, including usage examples (Cowan at one point wanted to have an example of each cmavo as used in every Yacc rule that invoked its selma'o, but we've eased that goal), The bottom line is that we have adequate definitions when no one asks questions that require further refinement, and enough coined and actual usage examples that no one asks for more when the section is discussed.

We also need a period of looking at interactions between the hopefully well-defined cmavo before we can be sure that there are no integration problems (we don't need Lojban to become like the Obamacare website - individual pieces that somehow fail to integrate). But I think that would be achieved in just a few months once all the pieces of the language were approved (I asked for 6 months of integrated review after all the sections were approved, during which time, change pages for CLL could also be generated to reflect any changes implied by the new definitions).

not to mention reams of discussion if there is anything
controversial about them.  Surely the boring one just need a write-up
and the non-boring ones a summary.
Everybody take a word and spend a few minutes, then the whole thing will
be done and we can get on with changing everything.  [sarcasm]

We actually made such a claim years ago. I think one person who knows the corpus tools could probably do an excellent job on a BPFK section (which has several cmavo) in a week of spare time of there is little actual usage and the selma'o are only used in one way in the grammar.

But there were few takers, because at the bottom line I don't think we have ever had a half dozen people at any one time who were willing to shepherd a section to completion. And many like me got bogged down every time they tried to start.

(It didn't help that people felt compelled to participate in the discussions of sections that were completed and up for a vote within a week or two - following and participating in controversial discussions usually chewed up everyone's available Lojban time, leaving no time or energy for writing new sections. I certainly gave up long ago trying to follow Lojban List and doing useful work. And BPFK work was even more intense because of imposed time limits for discussion.)

lojbab

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