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Re: TECH: input on gismu place structures
mi'e djan. kau,n
.i la lojbab cusku di'e
> sarcu - JCB's 1975 equivalent appears to have a du'u (neither nu nor
> object) defined for x1 (though he had no real way to express a du'u).
I read L1 4th ed. pp 198-99 as meaning that JCB believes that all indirect
statements are in fact event descriptions in Loglan. This is a defensible
position, but one which I believe leads to more confusions than it is worth.
> It appears in any case that x1 is a sumti raising, but should the type
> of abstraction be limited to a du'u? (I am coming to think of a du'u
> abstract as a second order abstract: ledu'u broda = lenu lenu broda cu
> fatci - with the implication that any other abstract is a sumti raising
> from a du'u place)
>
> His wording: x1 is a factually necessary condition for event/process x2
I do not think that a du'u is required here. An event may be necessary for
another event; likewise an object may be necessary for an event without any
raising: soil is necessary for the event of a tree growing (except in
Brooklyn).
Re: sidbo. I second Nick's remarks, and I think specifically that the
"Portuguese concept of beauty" is specifically:
le sidbo be zo melbi bei loi porto
the concept of "beautiful" as-thought-by the-mass-of Portuguese-things.
or by the same token
le si'o melbi kei be loi porto
the concept-of something-being-beuatiful as-thought-by etc.
using the related "si'o" abstractor, whose place structure is "x1 is a
concept of <bridi> in the mind of x2". Note the mandatory "kei".
--
John Cowan sharing account <lojbab@access.digex.net> for now