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binxo
Lojbab:
>> le bitmu cu binxo lo blabi
>> The wall becomes something white.
>>
>> le bitmu cu binxo le ka blabi
>> The wall becomes white.
>>
>I would say the first.
>
>>It seems that x1 and x2 are referring to the same object, which
>>would be saying that something becomes itself.
>
>You are fiddling around with the "identity" sense of "become". If I become
>a Frech-speaker, I am still myself. I am then a French speaker too, Have
I
>become myself?
But that's precisely the point. In English "I become a French speaker"
does not get translated into Logic as "there is some French speaker x
such that I become x". Would you say:
mi binxo lo se fraso
There is at least one French speaker x such that I become x.
Or:
mi binxo le ka se fraso
I become such that I have the property of being a French speaker.
>There is an implicit time transition in binxo. The x1 is a before-state
>that may or may not apply afterwards. The x2 (probably) must not apply
before
>the time transition.
Precisely, but {lo se fraso} is not a state! So if the x2 has to be a state
(or better a property) you should say {mi binxo le ka se fraso}.
If we were to accept {mi binxo lo se fraso}, then we lose the connection
with predicate logic.
co'o mi'e xorxes