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Re: Dvorak (& Lojban)
Where English is less definitive, Lojbanists say, "English is less
definitive!" Where Lojban is less definitive, Lojbanists say, "English
overspecifies!" It's all so polemical. You sound like Esperantists. :)
I am not saying that. I am saying that Lojban enables me to consider
some ideas that I don't readily find in English.
> .i lo mi ke xekri bunre mlatu zu'a vu pu'o kalte le cmacu
Looking at your above sentence, and before reading your English
translation, I would simply have said, "Far to the left of me, a
dark brown cat of mine is about to catch the mouse." That's not
difficult to say and I could have sworn it conveyed all the
*relevant* information.
Not difficult to say, but that is not what I understand the Lojban to
say, particularly not what I understand it to say before I filled in
the context.
My understanding of {pu'o} is that
* it does not tell how far to the pastward of the event we
referring; and
* it does not tell when the event is taking place.
(Chapter 10.10, _The Complete Lojban Language_)
After reading my statement of context it is fair for you to think the
time is "now": `I only have one black/brown cat, I am looking out my
window on my left into the field'. This context suggests {ca pu'o};
but before I specified such a context, a listener should figure I
may be referring to the past, present, or future; and the cat may be a
kitten crouching before a ball of yarn.
Indeed, one might wonder whether it is a Sapir-Whorfian effect of your
English that caused you to presume that {pu'o} implies {ca pu'o}; or
is it that regardless of language, we presume a context to be current
and local unless told otherwise? (I can imagine strong practical
arguments for the latter.)
(Incidentally, insufficient specificity is why I left the designatee
of {lo} unspecified until I set the context; after setting the
context, the universe of discourse contained only one veridical {lo mi
ke xekri bunre mlatu}. Needless to say, if by default we presume a
context to be current and local, then I could have presumed you knew
that our universe of discourse contained only one veridical cat.)
--
Robert J. Chassell bob@rattlesnake.com
25 Rattlesnake Mountain Road bob@ai.mit.edu
Stockbridge, MA 01262-0693 USA (413) 298-4725