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Re: [lojban] Balningau: The Great Update



No one who has followed this list for the last week, let alone the last few decades, would confuse me with tool of Lojbab, who ignorant, muddled nefeasance can not helped Lojban, whether or it not it has hurt it.  Nor with a supporter of the bipfuckers, who have pissed away more than a decade of creative Lojban, not only not adopting or adapting it, as they might have under even Lojbab's and Robins's reading of their charge, but not even keeping records of it to be brought up when the baseline comes.  I don't bear them any animus, one is the victim or personality and a raft of the vicissitudes of life (which he has chosen to have), the other is a posse of volunteer dilettantes, compared to which nailed Jello and herded cats are models of stability and efficiency.  I don't bear any animus to selpa'i et all , either -- or didn't before I read their comments on my attempt to sum up and resolve the current controversy.  Now I have a common reaction to being misrepresented and strawmanned.
ad Lacewell
I didn't assume (or imply) that changes from this group would be hasty or illogical; I just said that official changes would be slow and controlled, which is just the way the process works, even if the suggested changes are good and logic (in whatever is the relevant sense here).  And, of course, I was just reporting, not trying to convince anyone of anything at that point.
There is no assumption that any change  -- from any source -- is illogical (in any sense); this is again just a factual report on the situation: that any change must be tested against the logical standards.  As noted later, changes in the gismu (adding, dropping, changing places, and so on) nore or less get a pass on this, since they can't affect the logic.  Changes in cmavo require a closer look, sometimes a very long one indeed,
Maintaining monoparsing is not an easy task (look at how hard it was to achieve -- even in the rather restricted way we have).  So, yes, left unrestrained it is likely that the community would lose that feature of Lojban, but even if it would not, it is important to check at each new potential problem point.
The next series of comments are actually apparently agreeing with me while being mildly snarky.  As noted, I agree that Lojban needs a more rapid updating process (starting by catching up to now from 20 years ago) and that the President is at least not part of the solution, nor are the bipfuckers.  The claims that the proposing group has come up with solutions that should be official and that they are correctly meeting various sorts of problems is, of course, merely hearsay, since the solutions have not been written up and presented and tested agains standards or compared with other possible solutions  (even the "problems" which are supposedly solved have not been verified as real problems except to someone's subjective satisfaction, so far as t public record shows).
The claim that there are people dying to create educational materials is weakened by the dearth of such materials.  There is a whole lot of Lojban that needs teaching and that does not involve any controversial matter, but only a couple of texts have been produced even for that.  Show us the work.  Hell, show us specimens that use non-standard stuff; that's a good way to make a case for making it standard (not to mention that ity ios easier to tidy up a textbook than to create one in the first place).  
I didn't say that one only gets a predicate by predicate pumping; I said that that is a not vry effective way to learn a predicate and that learning it in situ and as much as needed is better.  I think the disagreement here comes down to a difference in theoretical emphasis, which doesn't affect the main point.
The central issue for Lojban is always syntactical unambiguity; changes in gismu, etc., never affect that. Logjam, the thread from Loglan 1955 to Lojban now, has had half a dozen different gismu lists.  People have enthusiastically learned each of them and some have even relearned lists a few times.  None of this has been a serious problem for Logjam and a new list wouldn't be either -- unless, of course, we get dueling lists, aas typically happens at a certain point (the history of conlangs over the last century and a half).
That cmavo might, among vocabulary items, matter was set up at the beginning, so it should not have been a surprise.  The first part was, after all, just a plea not to get all pushed out of shape by someone proposing to muck about with gismu, which is what has been going on for the last few days.  The contrast is now to what might matter, if someone were to do it (which, as we have been reminded constantly for a decade, not one is about to).  
If you don't like "control", then perhaps what is needed is a guarantee that, before a change is implemented, it is thoroughly tested against the existing standard and is adapted to fit in without loss of unambiguity.  This is not an easy test to make, apparently, so we need more than just the committee of the whole or some smaller consensus to decide; we need expertise.  And that is starting to get to something very like control -- and gets there all the way if a failed proposal is not allowed into the language (as it must be).
I am glad that someone (many someone;s apparently) know all about Lojban, past and present.  I do wish they would tell the rest of us, something the bipfuckers could and should have done but never did.  But, until this new CLL appears, the claims that all is known are merely subjective certainty, not subject to verification.  In particular, of course, is this language actually unambiguous?  Subjective certainty has long proven rather misleading on that point, for one.  In short, yes, the fact that no one has written a new CLL does mean that users don't know its feature set -- or, at least, they have no reason to be sure they do. Unlike English, where the claim makes sense (and is even true in a certain sense), Lojban has objective criteria to meet and meeting them requires the language to be laid out in totality.
No one said Lojban has only one need.  It is a question of priorities and using what work time there is wisely.  If the bipfuckers are blocking you from doing what you to do, the most practical solution -- given that they are in control of the process and will have to be satisfied sometime (for their project is at least one need) -- is to deal with their problem right away and then get on with what you want to do.  Otherwise, kvetching about how they are blocking progress is merely hypocritical, since the path forward is there to follow. 
Nothing disrepectful about my remarks.  The proposers have consistently not dealt with cmavo even though they have had every opportunity and know that that is a direct path to what they want to do, so the inference that they will continue this way does not seem unjustified.  And, of course, since they have done nothing with cmavo, they have no demonstrated competence to do so.  Not ignorance, just the public record.
Your final conclusion is not backed up by the evidence: there was nothing hateful, foregone (well, I figured out myy conclusion before I wrote the article and shaped the article to it, but that is not what you meant), nor demonizing, nor inconsistent.   Your response makes continuing discussion rather difficult, since you presumably won't read anything else either.
My credentials are not a basis for my conclusion, just bona fides as a philosopher of language as called for.
ad Burka
Of course a language has words.  The point is (as often repeated) that for Lojban, what the brivla are or what places they have and the like is not crucial, so long as they have some and are collectively enough.  And that goal has been achiever many times already and may well be several more times.  So, Lojban as a recognizable entity can exist with a wide range of vocabularies -- and has.  Fiddling with brivla isa problem not for the language but for a community in which there are two competing versions.  Changing a community from one version to another is difficult, but has been done several times; allowing two versions to compete and interact may be one way to effect that change but has historically more often led to schism and collapse.
A good well-defined vocabulary is essential for generating usage, maybe, but it has to be noted that we have all learned the current vocabulary to the point we have and many of us have learned several older versions (and thus, presumably, not so good) versions as well.  We generate a fair amount of usage and are probably neither smarter nor more motivated than the next generation of Lojbanists, so it is not obvious that any changes in that vocabulary are needed to win more learners or get them to produce more.  Indeed, the past history of changes suggest that its only effect in terms of usage is to tick off a few old-timers.
We agree more or less that people will do what they want and that there is nothing we can do about that.  That hardly prevents people with goals in view as seeing people doing things that are not furthering those goals as wasting time (particularly since what they are doing is rather like what the goals require and what they are doing doesn't have any merit within the goal scheme).  Of course, if you don't accept those goals, you don't see the force of that, and that is your right as well.  But, if the goals are a central part of some project which you want to particate in, you ought either go along or work to change those goals  (just bitching about them doesn't really count).  That a proposal to do something which is viewed as a waste of time comes to be viewed as an attack (if it was) when it is presented as 1) important and 2) as being suppressed by people who adhere to the goals. Since neither of these claims are obviously true, the presentation appears to be hostile rather than collegial (although, given actual colleagues and colleges, ...).  As to why I think that the people who want to play with brivla are not interested in or competent to work with cmavo, I look at the public record: despite all manner of urging to do so, they have not.  They may be competent -- at least some of them -- but we do not know (which is what "not obviously" means).  Of course, the implicit assumption is that anyone can probably do at least some useful work with cmavo if they take the task in hand and, up to a point, this is pretty certainly so -- at least as much as it is true for making meaningful changes to gismu.
As I have found, an offensive tone is pretty subjective.  I don't have a dog in this fight but I found the original proclamation and most the follow up rather hostile (at least implying that only the proponents were right and they were being suppressed and so had to fight, the old war on Christmas gambit).  The responses also seemed to be a bit over the top, but in the ball park for this sort of exchange.  It would have better had they all not happened and, objectively, there was no real reason for them to.  Aside from the possibility of schism, which comes more from the manner of presentation than from the activity, there is nothing wrong with predicate meddling.  But, on the other hand, if the probability of schism arises, then LLG has an obligation not to foster on its own resources.  (Notice please -- and I want credit for this -- I have never once mentioned paranoia nor megalomania on either side.)


--In the midst off this often depressingly puerile exchange, I found the call for a philosopher of language, so I volunteer (MA in Linguistics, PhD in Philosophy, dissertation on the borderline between logic and language, etc. etc. including teaching course in the area for forty three years, somewhere between 54 and 38 years in the logical language business, including all the available offices at TLI and editor of The Lojbanist and VP and Board member at LLG).

So, a curse on both your houses!

Lojban, as what people say when they say they are doing Lojban, will change constantly and in uncontrolled ways. Lojban, as the language that has official imprimatur (however that may be gained, right now from BPFK, apparently), will also change but more slowly and in more controlled ways. That it will change (or die, of course) is a result of its being a language. That its official form will change slowly and in a controlled way is a result of the kind of language it is: constructed and logical, especially the latter.

Logical” here has two interrelated parts. The first of these is that Lojban is to be syntactically unambiguous, every grammatical utterance has a unique parse which tells how the sentence is to be interpreted. The second is that this is to be achieved by taking the languages syntax from that of First Order Predicate Logic (actually some higher order intensional logic, a la Montague, but that does not make a difference to the basic point here). Now, someone who knows FOPL would be hard pressed to find it in Lojban; many things have had to be changed to make a usable language (every other _expression_ in FOPL is a parenthesis of some sort, for example, or some equally non-content _expression_). These impose restrictions on how the official language can change, since the connection with FOPL cannot be broken for fear of losing unambiguity (or, at least, a relatively easy way to claim it, although this connection is not really exploited), and, even if the connection is lost, unambiguity must be maintained. So, any change has to be checked to see that it does not affect this prime quality (basically, Lojban's only special feature – it and Loglan are hardly the only languages with socket-and-plugs core syntax). So there is always going to be a prescriptive element in Lojban.

That being said, it must also be said that most changes in vocabulary have nothing to do with this central ground. Changing the meaning of one of the holes in a socket does not affect the heart of the language. Whether or not these changes are officialized or not just doesn't matter to Lojban. Of course, such a change may affect the Lojban community, dividing it into two groups who misunderstand one another in some particular circumstances. For the development of the language, this can have serious consequences, cutting one group off from the accumulated lore of the past and the other group off from new material as it comes in, breaking continuity. It tends moreover to tick off more experienced speakers, who have learned the older form and are now asked to relearn (which is very hard – I still, nearly 40 later, am most likely to come up with a Loglan word as my first attempt). And, alas, all this tends to create internal tensions, which can tear a constructed-language community apart, resulting, typically, in, first, two much smaller groups in competition, then one still rather small group, then nothing in that line at all.

But this doesn't have to happen, especially if, as here, the changes are made in remote (so, by assumption, less used) holes: it would be a long time before the two sides noticed that one side had dropped x5 of {klama}, say. (The need to know all the holes of all the sockets goes back to JCB's medieval notions of language learning and to the devices which were designed to enable “predicate pumping”. It once was the case that at least initial claims to competence amounted to a total of the number of sockets you could recognize and give all the hole-meanings for – and, eventually, all the derivational forms. While rational language teaching material is still not as available as would be nice, most of what is available teaches vocabulary in context, stressing the useful part and introducing both sockets and their holes as needed.) Of course, that raises the issue of why bother to change these holes and the answer seems to be that the changes are to satisfy some extrinsic goal: symmetry or “orderliness” or “ease of learning” (which, in context, suggest that learning predicates is done by mini-pumping, learning all the motion words at once, say – a possible but rarely ideal approach). So not central issues at all. Further, we have all the usual tools of language for dealing with dialects and diachronic change. We recognize the differences and translate and, if we don't, we ask for an explanation when the discussion obviously runs off the rails. Thus, vocabulary changes are just not important.

Well, a few are and these are all among cmavo. Obviously, if you change the meaning of {a} you have changed the connection to FOPL, and similarly with other expressions clearly tied to logic. But this tends to expand outward. If you change definition {ai} to or from factive (I don't remember where it is right now; it has changed at least five times in 60 years), you change the whole logical structure of the utterance of which it is a part, and many expressions have this feature. The possibilities for misunderstanding are now at a more profound level, even if, technically, the same cures are available. So, for these kinds of changes, control is again needed. And, correspondingly, we need to know where we are now, as – for various reason – apparently we do not. The definitions of content expressions may not be perfect, but they serve (as the fact that they have served and are serving shows) and so “fixing” them is a low priority. But, if, as is claimed, the definitions of some non-content expressions is no complete or not set, this is a structural matter that needs to be fixed if we are to say the language is complete (let alone finished).

So, if you accept that the cmavo are not completed, that is the priority task and any activity that might be directed to that task but goes to something else is a waste or even an attack on Lojban. Since meddling with gismu is a task very similar to organizing the cmavo, it will appear to Lojbab et al as such a waste (or, given the tone of the proclamation of undertaking that task, an attack). On the other hand, since the people doing the meddling are pretty clearly not going to work on cmavo (and are not obviously competent to do so anyhow), the tone of his response seems inappropriate (except as a response to their tone). The best thing is just to ignore them, pretty much. The one reason to pay attention them is the potential they have to sow dissensions, but, for that, the appropriate response is just not to allow them to use the LLG websites.

In the midst off this often depressingly puerile exchange, I found the call for a philosopher of language, so I volunteer (MA in Linguistics, PhD in Philosophy, dissertation on the borderline between logic and language, etc. etc. including teaching course in the area for forty three years, somewhere between 54 and 38 years in the logical language business, including all the available offices at TLI and editor of The Lojbanist and VP and Board member at LLG).

So, a curse on both your houses!

Lojban, as what people say when they say they are doing Lojban, will change constantly and in uncontrolled ways. Lojban, as the language that has official imprimatur (however that may be gained, right now from BPFK, apparently), will also change but more slowly and in more controlled ways. That it will change (or die, of course) is a result of its being a language. That its official form will change slowly and in a controlled way is a result of the kind of language it is: constructed and logical, especially the latter.

Logical” here has two interrelated parts. The first of these is that Lojban is to be syntactically unambiguous, every grammatical utterance has a unique parse which tells how the sentence is to be interpreted. The second is that this is to be achieved by taking the languages syntax from that of First Order Predicate Logic (actually some higher order intensional logic, a la Montague, but that does not make a difference to the basic point here). Now, someone who knows FOPL would be hard pressed to find it in Lojban; many things have had to be changed to make a usable language (every other _expression_ in FOPL is a parenthesis of some sort, for example, or some equally non-content _expression_). These impose restrictions on how the official language can change, since the connection with FOPL cannot be broken for fear of losing unambiguity (or, at least, a relatively easy way to claim it, although this connection is not really exploited), and, even if the connection is lost, unambiguity must be maintained. So, any change has to be checked to see that it does not affect this prime quality (basically, Lojban's only special feature – it and Loglan are hardly the only languages with socket-and-plugs core syntax). So there is always going to be a prescriptive element in Lojban.

That being said, it must also be said that most changes in vocabulary have nothing to do with this central ground. Changing the meaning of one of the holes in a socket does not affect the heart of the language. Whether or not these changes are officialized or not just doesn't matter to Lojban. Of course, such a change may affect the Lojban community, dividing it into two groups who misunderstand one another in some particular circumstances. For the development of the language, this can have serious consequences, cutting one group off from the accumulated lore of the past and the other group off from new material as it comes in, breaking continuity. It tends moreover to tick off more experienced speakers, who have learned the older form and are now asked to relearn (which is very hard – I still, nearly 40 later, am most likely to come up with a Loglan word as my first attempt). And, alas, all this tends to create internal tensions, which can tear a constructed-language community apart, resulting, typically, in, first, two much smaller groups in competition, then one still rather small group, then nothing in that line at all.

But this doesn't have to happen, especially if, as here, the changes are made in remote (so, by assumption, less used) holes: it would be a long time before the two sides noticed that one side had dropped x5 of {klama}, say. (The need to know all the holes of all the sockets goes back to JCB's medieval notions of language learning and to the devices which were designed to enable “predicate pumping”. It once was the case that at least initial claims to competence amounted to a total of the number of sockets you could recognize and give all the hole-meanings for – and, eventually, all the derivational forms. While rational language teaching material is still not as available as would be nice, most of what is available teaches vocabulary in context, stressing the useful part and introducing both sockets and their holes as needed.) Of course, that raises the issue of why bother to change these holes and the answer seems to be that the changes are to satisfy some extrinsic goal: symmetry or “orderliness” or “ease of learning” (which, in context, suggest that learning predicates is done by mini-pumping, learning all the motion words at once, say – a possible but rarely ideal approach). So not central issues at all. Further, we have all the usual tools of language for dealing with dialects and diachronic change. We recognize the differences and translate and, if we don't, we ask for an explanation when the discussion obviously runs off the rails. Thus, vocabulary changes are just not important.

Well, a few are and these are all among cmavo. Obviously, if you change the meaning of {a} you have changed the connection to FOPL, and similarly with other expressions clearly tied to logic. But this tends to expand outward. If you change definition {ai} to or from factive (I don't remember where it is right now; it has changed at least five times in 60 years), you change the whole logical structure of the utterance of which it is a part, and many expressions have this feature. The possibilities for misunderstanding are now at a more profound level, even if, technically, the same cures are available. So, for these kinds of changes, control is again needed. And, correspondingly, we need to know where we are now, as – for various reason – apparently we do not. The definitions of content expressions may not be perfect, but they serve (as the fact that they have served and are serving shows) and so “fixing” them is a low priority. But, if, as is claimed, the definitions of some non-content expressions is no complete or not set, this is a structural matter that needs to be fixed if we are to say the language is complete (let alone finished).

So, if you accept that the cmavo are not completed, that is the priority task and any activity that might be directed to that task but goes to something else is a waste or even an attack on Lojban. Since meddling with gismu is a task very similar to organizing the cmavo, it will appear to Lojbab et al as such a waste (or, given the tone of the proclamation of undertaking that task, an attack). On the other hand, since the people doing the meddling are pretty clearly not going to work on cmavo (and are not obviously competent to do so anyhow), the tone of his response seems inappropriate (except as a response to their tone). The best thing is just to ignore them, pretty much. The one reason to pay attention them is the potential they have to sow dissensions, but, for that, the appropriate response is just not to allow them to use the LLG websites.

In the midst off this often depressingly puerile exchange, I found the call for a philosopher of language, so I volunteer (MA in Linguistics, PhD in Philosophy, dissertation on the borderline between logic and language, etc. etc. including teaching course in the area for forty three years, somewhere between 54 and 38 years in the logical language business, including all the available offices at TLI and editor of The Lojbanist and VP and Board member at LLG).

So, a curse on both your houses!

Lojban, as what people say when they say they are doing Lojban, will change constantly and in uncontrolled ways. Lojban, as the language that has official imprimatur (however that may be gained, right now from BPFK, apparently), will also change but more slowly and in more controlled ways. That it will change (or die, of course) is a result of its being a language. That its official form will change slowly and in a controlled way is a result of the kind of language it is: constructed and logical, especially the latter.

Logical” here has two interrelated parts. The first of these is that Lojban is to be syntactically unambiguous, every grammatical utterance has a unique parse which tells how the sentence is to be interpreted. The second is that this is to be achieved by taking the languages syntax from that of First Order Predicate Logic (actually some higher order intensional logic, a la Montague, but that does not make a difference to the basic point here). Now, someone who knows FOPL would be hard pressed to find it in Lojban; many things have had to be changed to make a usable language (every other _expression_ in FOPL is a parenthesis of some sort, for example, or some equally non-content _expression_). These impose restrictions on how the official language can change, since the connection with FOPL cannot be broken for fear of losing unambiguity (or, at least, a relatively easy way to claim it, although this connection is not really exploited), and, even if the connection is lost, unambiguity must be maintained. So, any change has to be checked to see that it does not affect this prime quality (basically, Lojban's only special feature – it and Loglan are hardly the only languages with socket-and-plugs core syntax). So there is always going to be a prescriptive element in Lojban.

That being said, it must also be said that most changes in vocabulary have nothing to do with this central ground. Changing the meaning of one of the holes in a socket does not affect the heart of the language. Whether or not these changes are officialized or not just doesn't matter to Lojban. Of course, such a change may affect the Lojban community, dividing it into two groups who misunderstand one another in some particular circumstances. For the development of the language, this can have serious consequences, cutting one group off from the accumulated lore of the past and the other group off from new material as it comes in, breaking continuity. It tends moreover to tick off more experienced speakers, who have learned the older form and are now asked to relearn (which is very hard – I still, nearly 40 later, am most likely to come up with a Loglan word as my first attempt). And, alas, all this tends to create internal tensions, which can tear a constructed-language community apart, resulting, typically, in, first, two much smaller groups in competition, then one still rather small group, then nothing in that line at all.

But this doesn't have to happen, especially if, as here, the changes are made in remote (so, by assumption, less used) holes: it would be a long time before the two sides noticed that one side had dropped x5 of {klama}, say. (The need to know all the holes of all the sockets goes back to JCB's medieval notions of language learning and to the devices which were designed to enable “predicate pumping”. It once was the case that at least initial claims to competence amounted to a total of the number of sockets you could recognize and give all the hole-meanings for – and, eventually, all the derivational forms. While rational language teaching material is still not as available as would be nice, most of what is available teaches vocabulary in context, stressing the useful part and introducing both sockets and their holes as needed.) Of course, that raises the issue of why bother to change these holes and the answer seems to be that the changes are to satisfy some extrinsic goal: symmetry or “orderliness” or “ease of learning” (which, in context, suggest that learning predicates is done by mini-pumping, learning all the motion words at once, say – a possible but rarely ideal approach). So not central issues at all. Further, we have all the usual tools of language for dealing with dialects and diachronic change. We recognize the differences and translate and, if we don't, we ask for an explanation when the discussion obviously runs off the rails. Thus, vocabulary changes are just not important.

Well, a few are and these are all among cmavo. Obviously, if you change the meaning of {a} you have changed the connection to FOPL, and similarly with other expressions clearly tied to logic. But this tends to expand outward. If you change definition {ai} to or from factive (I don't remember where it is right now; it has changed at least five times in 60 years), you change the whole logical structure of the utterance of which it is a part, and many expressions have this feature. The possibilities for misunderstanding are now at a more profound level, even if, technically, the same cures are available. So, for these kinds of changes, control is again needed. And, correspondingly, we need to know where we are now, as – for various reason – apparently we do not. The definitions of content expressions may not be perfect, but they serve (as the fact that they have served and are serving shows) and so “fixing” them is a low priority. But, if, as is claimed, the definitions of some non-content expressions is no complete or not set, this is a structural matter that needs to be fixed if we are to say the language is complete (let alone finished).

So, if you accept that the cmavo are not completed, that is the priority task and any activity that might be directed to that task but goes to something else is a waste or even an attack on Lojban. Since meddling with gismu is a task very similar to organizing the cmavo, it will appear to Lojbab et al as such a waste (or, given the tone of the proclamation of undertaking that task, an attack). On the other hand, since the people doing the meddling are pretty clearly not going to work on cmavo (and are not obviously competent to do so anyhow), the tone of his response seems inappropriate (except as a response to their tone). The best thing is just to ignore them, pretty much. The one reason to pay attention them is the potential they have to sow dissensions, but, for that, the appropriate response is just not to allow them to use the LLG websites.

In the midst off this often depressingly puerile exchange, I found the call for a philosopher of language, so I volunteer (MA in Linguistics, PhD in Philosophy, dissertation on the borderline between logic and language, etc. etc. including teaching course in the area for forty three years, somewhere between 54 and 38 years in the logical language business, including all the available offices at TLI and editor of The Lojbanist and VP and Board member at LLG).

So, a curse on both your houses!

Lojban, as what people say when they say they are doing Lojban, will change constantly and in uncontrolled ways. Lojban, as the language that has official imprimatur (however that may be gained, right now from BPFK, apparently), will also change but more slowly and in more controlled ways. That it will change (or die, of course) is a result of its being a language. That its official form will change slowly and in a controlled way is a result of the kind of language it is: constructed and logical, especially the latter.

Logical” here has two interrelated parts. The first of these is that Lojban is to be syntactically unambiguous, every grammatical utterance has a unique parse which tells how the sentence is to be interpreted. The second is that this is to be achieved by taking the languages syntax from that of First Order Predicate Logic (actually some higher order intensional logic, a la Montague, but that does not make a difference to the basic point here). Now, someone who knows FOPL would be hard pressed to find it in Lojban; many things have had to be changed to make a usable language (every other _expression_ in FOPL is a parenthesis of some sort, for example, or some equally non-content _expression_). These impose restrictions on how the official language can change, since the connection with FOPL cannot be broken for fear of losing unambiguity (or, at least, a relatively easy way to claim it, although this connection is not really exploited), and, even if the connection is lost, unambiguity must be maintained. So, any change has to be checked to see that it does not affect this prime quality (basically, Lojban's only special feature – it and Loglan are hardly the only languages with socket-and-plugs core syntax). So there is always going to be a prescriptive element in Lojban.

That being said, it must also be said that most changes in vocabulary have nothing to do with this central ground. Changing the meaning of one of the holes in a socket does not affect the heart of the language. Whether or not these changes are officialized or not just doesn't matter to Lojban. Of course, such a change may affect the Lojban community, dividing it into two groups who misunderstand one another in some particular circumstances. For the development of the language, this can have serious consequences, cutting one group off from the accumulated lore of the past and the other group off from new material as it comes in, breaking continuity. It tends moreover to tick off more experienced speakers, who have learned the older form and are now asked to relearn (which is very hard – I still, nearly 40 later, am most likely to come up with a Loglan word as my first attempt). And, alas, all this tends to create internal tensions, which can tear a constructed-language community apart, resulting, typically, in, first, two much smaller groups in competition, then one still rather small group, then nothing in that line at all.

But this doesn't have to happen, especially if, as here, the changes are made in remote (so, by assumption, less used) holes: it would be a long time before the two sides noticed that one side had dropped x5 of {klama}, say. (The need to know all the holes of all the sockets goes back to JCB's medieval notions of language learning and to the devices which were designed to enable “predicate pumping”. It once was the case that at least initial claims to competence amounted to a total of the number of sockets you could recognize and give all the hole-meanings for – and, eventually, all the derivational forms. While rational language teaching material is still not as available as would be nice, most of what is available teaches vocabulary in context, stressing the useful part and introducing both sockets and their holes as needed.) Of course, that raises the issue of why bother to change these holes and the answer seems to be that the changes are to satisfy some extrinsic goal: symmetry or “orderliness” or “ease of learning” (which, in context, suggest that learning predicates is done by mini-pumping, learning all the motion words at once, say – a possible but rarely ideal approach). So not central issues at all. Further, we have all the usual tools of language for dealing with dialects and diachronic change. We recognize the differences and translate and, if we don't, we ask for an explanation when the discussion obviously runs off the rails. Thus, vocabulary changes are just not important.

Well, a few are and these are all among cmavo. Obviously, if you change the meaning of {a} you have changed the connection to FOPL, and similarly with other expressions clearly tied to logic. But this tends to expand outward. If you change definition {ai} to or from factive (I don't remember where it is right now; it has changed at least five times in 60 years), you change the whole logical structure of the utterance of which it is a part, and many expressions have this feature. The possibilities for misunderstanding are now at a more profound level, even if, technically, the same cures are available. So, for these kinds of changes, control is again needed. And, correspondingly, we need to know where we are now, as – for various reason – apparently we do not. The definitions of content expressions may not be perfect, but they serve (as the fact that they have served and are serving shows) and so “fixing” them is a low priority. But, if, as is claimed, the definitions of some non-content expressions is no complete or not set, this is a structural matter that needs to be fixed if we are to say the language is complete (let alone finished).

So, if you accept that the cmavo are not completed, that is the priority task and any activity that might be directed to that task but goes to something else is a waste or even an attack on Lojban. Since meddling with gismu is a task very similar to organizing the cmavo, it will appear to Lojbab et al as such a waste (or, given the tone of the proclamation of undertaking that task, an attack). On the other hand, since the people doing the meddling are pretty clearly not going to work on cmavo (and are not obviously competent to do so anyhow), the tone of his response seems inappropriate (except as a response to their tone). The best thing is just to ignore them, pretty much. The one reason to pay attention them is the potential they have to sow dissensions, but, for that, the appropriate response is just not to allow them to use the LLG websites.




On Monday, May 26, 2014 5:07 AM, selpa'i <seladwa@gmx.de> wrote:


la .xorxes. cu cusku di'e
> .e'u di'a casnu la'e di'u bau la lojban .i ba'a va'o lo nu go'i kei lo
> nu prenu gunta cu ba zi tolcfa .i pe'i na se vamji lo raktu fa lo nu
> darlu lo du'u ma kau ma kau zmadu lo ka jbocre .i banzu fa lo nu jarco

ni'o .a'o ma'a ba zi co'a gunka tu'a lo gimste .i .i lo kampu se stidi
cu pa moi .e'u .i xu su'o da poi kampu srana zo'u: do no'u la .xorxes.
cu djica lo nu ma'a da cnegau .i mi na tugni fi lo du'u lo nu da tcini
(to sa'e tcini ja vanbi toi) te sumti lo simsa be zo litki cu sarcu .i
pe'i zo va'o banzu .i si'a mi jinvi lo du'u ka'e vimcu vei so'e .a ro lo
marji te sumti .i zo marji zasti .i lo nu cusku lu ti baktu lo djacu
gi'e marji lo slasi li'u noi basti lu ti baktu lo djacu lo slasi li'u
noi cizra (to be mi toi) milxe cu cumki gi'e la'a sai banzu .i do'a nai
ju'o nandymau fa lo ka mo'icli .i ji'a sa'u ro da zo'u lo du'u lo baktu
da marji cu nibli lo du'u baktu fi zi'o .i ja'o lo si'o marji na vajni

ni'o .a'o su'o drata ba zi stidi de .i lo nu darlu lo na'e srana cu
xamgu ma'a no da (to mi zo'u pe'i lo ci moi te sumti be zo xamgu cu
panra lo re moi pe zo drani ge'u .a lo ci moi pe zo mapti toi) .u'i

mi'e la selpa'i mu'o


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