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Re: What the *%$@ does "nu" mean?
la .and. cusku di'e
> No offense to Lojbab, but I find this statement from
> John clearer than what Lojbab has been saying, & it
> would be nice to know whether Lojban Central endorses
> it.
Almost anything anyone says at any time is clearer than
anything lojbab says at every time. :-)
> So "re nu broda" is just as nonsensical as "re ka broda" and
> "re du`u broda".
Hmm, that does seem to follow.
> I can buy this characterization of {lo}, but I think we must
> recognize that it makes no sense to say {mi viska lo nu broda}.
> One can't see an abstract entity. It is as nonsensical as
> {mi viska lo du`u broda} or {mi viska li re}.
But perhaps one may observe an abstract entity. I'm not sure.
> Personally, I think it unfortunate that it makes no sense to
> say {mi viska lo nu broda}. How *does* one say that one sees
> a token of this event-type? Something like:
>
> mi viska lo token-of be lo nu broda
How about "lo sevzi be lo nu broda"? One of the things "sevzi"
means is "avatar", so "instantiation" can't be too far off.
> I really don't see what is gained by having nu be an event-type.
> {xlura} is not a flower-type, and {gerku} is not a dog-type,
> though {se gerku} is. Any context in which {lo nu broda} is
> of utility could probably be equally well served by {lo du`u
> broda}. E.g. instead of {mi djica lo nu broda} - "I desire
> that there be a token of event-type X", you could have
> {mi djica lo du`u broda} - "I desire that it be the case that
> X".
Hmm, that sounds like a reductio. As I said, I must think further.
> > ni'o
> > I think you are correct that in general the Lojban quotation words
> > refer to types rather than tokens, although the notions "type"
> > and "token" are problematic when one refers to complex objects:
> > the token "John loves only John" contains two tokens of "John",
> > but the corresponding type <John loves only John>, does it contain
> > two distinct types of <John>, or is there (as intuition asserts) only
> > one type of <John>?
>
> That depends on your view of names.
Sorry, I didn't mean to drag in names. Very well: in the sentence-type
<The sixth sick sheik's sixth sheep's sick.>, are there two distinct
word-types <sixth>, or is that nonsense because there is only
one word-type <sixth>? Presumably types should contain sub-types,
as tokens unquestionably contain sub-tokens. If not, what do
complex types contain?
--
John Cowan http://www.ccil.org/~cowan cowan@ccil.org
e'osai ko sarji la lojban