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Re: sets and masses (was: Quine text)
- To: John Cowan <cowan@snark.thyrsus.com>
- Subject: Re: sets and masses (was: Quine text)
- From: And Rosta <cbmvax!uunet!ucl.ac.uk!ucleaar>
- In-Reply-To: (Your message of Tue, 31 Mar 92 14:11:28 EST.) <41925.9203312011@bas-a.bcc.ac.uk>
- Reply-To: And Rosta <cbmvax!uunet!ucl.ac.uk!ucleaar>
- Sender: Lojban list <cbmvax!uunet!pucc.princeton.edu!LOJBAN>
John:
> Mark Shoulson writes:
>
> > By that reasoning, {loi remna cu morsi} would work well for "Man is mortal"
> > (would {lo'e remna} be better?), and {lo'i remna noroi morsi} would work
> > for "Man is immortal" (i.e. the human race as an entity).
>
> All these are correct. However, any set whatever can be put in the x1 place
> of "noroi morsi", because no set is ever dead, sets not being the sorts of
> things which live or die. Therefore,
>
> lo'i morsi cu noroi morsi
> The-set-of dead-things are-never dead
>
> is also true.
But you could say that a set dies at such a time as it becomes empty.
This is in fact how I understood "Man is immortal". (Actually, I understood
"The type Man will always exist".)
> I think the real point of "Man is immortal" is something like:
>
> roroiku da poi remna naku zo'u da morsi
> At-all-times there-exists a-human such-that-it-is-false that it
is-dead.
>
This is a valid reading, but I was hoping that the treatment of "Man is
immortal" would also cover:
The dodo is extinct.
The rat is widespread.
Note that in English we can say:
The dodo, which couldn't fly, is extinct.
I think to say this in Lojban you'd have to say 'dodo' twice with a
different descriptor each time?
As "Sophy ran for an hour each day for five years" shows, the bridi itself
can be a class generic (man is immortal, ran for 5 years) or a prototype
generic (man is mortal, ran for an hour each day).
---
And