moved from XXS: extended XS proposal
pc:
Further sorting: Three dogs attacked four men
lo ci gerku cu gunta lo vo nanmu : three dogs, four men, one attack
ci gerku cu gunta lo vo nanmu: three dogs, up to 12 men, three attacks
lo ci gerku cu gunta vo nanmu: three dogs, four men, four attacks
ci gerku cu gunta vo nanmu: three dogs, up to 12 men, 12 attacks
(I think MCLL is the same with {loi} for {lo}) Right so far?
And:
lo ci gerku cu gunta lo vo nanmu : three dogs, four men, one attack
ci gerku cu gunta lo vo nanmu: three dogs, up to 12 men, three attacks
lo ci gerku cu gunta vo nanmu: three dogs, four men, four attacks
ci gerku cu gunta vo nanmu: three dogs, up to 12 men, 12 attacks
xorxes:
lo ci gerku cu gunta lo vo nanmu ze'a le crisa
Trios of dogs have been attacking quartets of men all summer.
ci gerku cu gunta lo vo nanmu i reboi cy gunta lo reboi ny i noboi cy gunta lo paboi ny
Three dogs attack quartets of men, two dogs attack pairs of men, no dog attacks single men.
lo ci gerku cu gunta vo nanmu ze'a le ca crisa
Trios of dogs have attacked four men this summer.
Four men have been attacked by trios of dogs this summer.
ci gerku cu gunta vo nanmu i pa gerku cu gunta mu nanmu i no gerku cu gunta za'umu nanmu
Three dogs attacked four men, one dog attacked five, no dog attacked more than five.
xorxes: Right. We want to make the two claims:
ci gerku cu gunta lo nanmu ije lo gerku cu gunta vo nanmu
Three dogs attacked men, and dogs attacked four men.
We could say that as:
ci gerku kufa'u lo gerku cu gunta lo nanmu kufa'u vo nanmu
cifa'utu'o gerku cu gunta tu'ofa'uvo nanmu
but that wouldn't make for a nice headline.
The alternative is to define multiple quantifiers such that they act in parallel rather than one in the scope of the other. So {ci gerku cu gunta vo nanmu} would by definition expand to {ci gerku cu gunta lo nanmu ije lo gerku cu gunta vo nanmu}. I don't know how much havoc that would wreck elsewhere.
And:
I suggest this:
lo ci gerku lo vo nanmu NU ce'u gunka ce'u
Underlying x1, x2 order corresponds to linear order of ce'u.
The NU means that for each of its sumti, every member of the sumti is in the specified relation with some member of each of the other sumti.
To capture the notion that exactly 3 dogs were involved in attacks on men, and exactly four men were involved in attacks by dogs:
pa lo ci gerku pa lo vo nanmu NU ce'u gunka ce'u
To capture the notion that at least 3 dogs were involved in attacks on men, and at least four men were involved in attacks by dogs:
su'o lo ci gerku su'o lo vo nanmu NU ce'u gunka ce'u
or
pa lo su'o ci gerku pa lo su'o vo nanmu NU ce'u gunka ce'u
xorxes: {pa lo ci gerku pa lo vo nanmu cu NU ce'u gunta ce'u} seems to run into the same problem as the original {ci gerku vo nanmu cu gunta}. There is only one dog-trio NU-related to one man-quartet, but how many dog-trios are NU-related to more than one man-quartet? You'd have to apply the same method again:
lo pa lo ci gerku lo pa lo vo nanmu cu NU ce'u ce'u NU ce'u gunta ce'u
(I think)
we could do something similar by defining a lujvo, cmiti'i: "x1 and x2 are related so that each member of one is in relationship x3 with at least one member of the other, in the appropriate order". Then we'd have:
lo ci gerku lo vo nanmu cu cmiti'i le ka ce'u gunta ce'u
Your NU would be a generalization of {cmiti'i fi le ka}, because cmiti'i could only take binary relationships.
And: {pa lo ci gerku pa lo vo nanmu cu NU ce'u gunta ce'u} — hmm. There is exactly one dog trio and exactly one man quartet such that each member of the trio attacks a member of the quartet and each member of the quartet is attacked by a member of the trio. I haven't spotted how this fails to say what we want. There can't be more than three dogs attacking men, because that then would allow there to be more than one dog trio. What am I missing? In asking how many dog-trios are NU-related to more than one man-quartet, you seem to be suggesting that {pa lo ci gerku pa lo vo nanmu} doesn't exclude {za'u lo ci gerku za'u lo vo nanmu}, right? Doh! Yes of course. (Sorry for thinking aloud.) So the problem lies in using numbers as quantifiers. Instead we need something more like this:
li (su'o)ci li (su'o)vo NU ce'u poi gerku gunka ce'u poi nanmu
where the external sumti give the cardinalities of the sets of things that satisfy the relation. Is there any way to express this more simply, supposing that logic must be respected but Lojban grammar can, for the sake of discussion, be thrown out the window?
xorxes:I think we wouldn't need to throw the grammar out the window, but just reinterpret things differently. We throw out the window the left to right scope rule for multiple quantifiers. Instead, we say that one quantifier is under the scope of another only if it appears explicitly in an inner prenex. So:
ci da poi gerku zo'u vo de poi nanmu zo'u da gunta de
gives the odd reading that we now assign to {ci gerku cu gunta vo nanmu}. When two quantifiers appear in the same prenex, they are no longer taken to be one under the other. Instead, each is taken to head its own claim, and both claims are conjoined:
ci da poi gerku ku'o vo de poi nanmu zo'u da gunta de
expands to:
ci da poi gerku zo'u su'o de poi nanmu zo'u da gunta de
ije
vo de poi nanmu zo'u su'o da poi gerku zo'u da gunta de
which gives the natural reading of {ci gerku cu gunta vo nanmu}.
In general, the rule is that {PA1 broda PA2 brode cu brodi} expands to {PA1 da poi broda zo'u su'o de poi brode zo'u da de brodi ije PA2 de poi brode zo'u su'o da poi broda zo'u da de se brodi}. This rule requires double negatives to negate things: {no gerku cu gunta no nanmu} to say that no dog attacked no man, i.e. that no dog attacked any man and no man was attacked by any dog. I'm starting to like it... If one of the quantifiers is su'o and the other is not {no}, then one of the two claims adds nothing, su'o is just as if under the scope of the other quantifier. So su'o always has minimum scope (unless scope is forced with a prenex). The order of equal level terms is irrelevant. {ro le nanla cu cinba ci le nixli} says that all the boys kissed only three of the girls, i.e. every boy kissed at least one girl, and only three girls were kissed by at least one boy.
And: I take it that you're not proposing branching quantifiers in the underlying logic. That would blow my mind, let alone the rest of Lojbanistan's. Instead, you're proposing some complex rules for how unprenexed quantifiers translate into (still first order) logical forms. I'll have to think about it — whether the complexity of the translation to logical form is justified by the utility.
Okay, I've gone away & thought about it. Here are my thoughts:
Something I haven't thought through:
In current Lojban (1) requires no overt prenexing, but (2) does — "two girls" exports to a prenex higher than "every boy". In your system, (2-3), but not (1), require exporting both "every" and "two", right? In (3) you have to export "every" and "two" to the same prenex, else you get reading (1).
xorxes: (a) I find the novel reading fairly intuitive in lots of cases, starting with {ci gerku cu gunta vo nanmu}. It is possibly also the logic behind double negatives in languages like Spanish and some varieties of English. (b) I agree. (c) I like the idea of glorking + optional disambiguation very much. There is in fact some precedent for some kind of "parallel" scope of quantifiers in CLL:
The solution is to use a termset, which is a group of terms either joined by ce'e
(of selma'o CEhE) between each term, or else surrounded by nu'i (of selma'o NUhI)
on the front and nu'u (of selma'o NUhU) on the rear. Terms (which are either
sumti or sumti prefixed by tense or modal tags) that are grouped into a termset are
understood to have equal scope:
7.5) ci gerku ce'e re nanmu cu batci
nu'i ci gerku re nanmu [nu'u] cu batci
Three dogs [plus] two men, bite.
which picks out two groups, one of three dogs and the other of two men, and says
that every one of the dogs bites each of the men. The second Lojban version uses
forethought; note that ``nu'u'' is an elidable terminator, and in this case can be
freely elided.
But that is not quite what I propose, since it requires each member of each set to be related to each member of the other, not just that every member participates in at least one relationship. It also has the problem of using termsets for something different than their original function, so in some cases it creates ambiguity, and also of being cumbersome in forcing the two terms to be together. A UI indicator makes more sense.
I think it would make sense that explicit prenex is above the implicit prenex of the terms in the body, so that (2) in the novel interpretation would be the same as in the current one.
And:
Now I've slept on this, I like it even more than I did last night. The great virtue of the left-to-right scope rule was its straightforwardness, but its downside was (i) the way it forces fixed linear order onto structures that would otherwise have free order and (ii) the way an essentially hierarchical phenomenon (i.e. scope) is represented nonhierarchically bridi-internally. So the idea that same-level quantifiers translate to a same-level prenex, with linear order not mattering, is very good. The logic of cohabited prenexes is not compositional, but is justified by its expressive power. (Or maybe it is compositional, to somebody who can get their head round branching quantifiers...)
But this opens the way to a whole new programme of enquiry. With the left-to-right rule gone, the meanings of lots of bridi will have to be reexamined and new rules decided or deduced. For example, can naku cohabit a prenex? Probably not. In that case, in {ci da naku vo de}, do ci & vo cohabit a prenex, or does the linear position of naku somehow force them into different prenexes? And so on and so on. There needs to be a balance among (a) the need for simple rules, (b) the attraction of linear order not having logical import, and (c) the need for expressiveness and convenience.
xorxes:I can't make any sense of naku at the same level of the quantifiers, so I see three options:
(1) is nice in that {ja'aku} is available to do the same thing without the negation.
(2) is nice in that the order of terms at the same level, including naku, remains free.
(3) seems totally unintuitive and I mentioned it just for completeness.
I like (2).
And: I meant that as just an example of the host of unresolved issues that are newly created by the direction we're taking. As for your answer, I don't know which I prefer. If linear order becomes insignificant, then it has to be (2) or (3), and I don't know how we'd decide which. If the answer is (1), then linear order remains significant: and then we have to seek some principle to determine and justify when linear order is and isn't significant. I'm not saying that it is beyond our powers to do this: I'm just pointing out what has to be done.
xorxes: Another issue would be logical connectives. In principle, connected sumti should behave like quantified ones, so that {ko'a e ko'e broda ko'i e ko'o} should expand to {ko'a broda ko'i a ko'o ije ko'e broda ko'i a ko'o ije ko'a a ko'e broda ko'i ije ko'a a ko'e broda ko'o}. In other words, {e} should behave like {ro} and {a} should behave like {su'o}. Symmetric connectives present no problem of interpretation in this scheme because they can all be expressed in terms of quantifiers. Asymmetric connectives... I have to think some more about it.
And: It would be very bad if connectives weren't symmetrical with quantifiers. But how to express the CLL contrast
ko'a su'oda ge broda gi brode
ko'a ge broda gi brode vau su'oda
You can't readily prenex nonsumti connectives.
xorxes: The particular example you give doesn't present a problem. {su'oda zo'u ko'a da ge broda gi brode} gives the first meaning and either of your forms gives the other meaning. However, with any quantifier other than su'o it will be a problem. One possibility could be to have some way of marking a prenex as base-level, so that following prenexes will be under the scope of the connectives that appear in the body of the bridi. Anything in the base-level prenex would have the same scope level as things in the body. Something to indicate sub-base level would be needed too, as one may want to start with a sub-base prenex. So:
CLL: ko'a roda ge broda gi brode
NI: roda zo'u ko'a da ge broda gi brode
CLL: ko'a ge broda gi brode vau roda
NI: roda zo'u-SUB-BASE ko'a da ge broda gi brode
CLL: ko'a roda ga broda gi brode ije ko'a ge broda gi brode vau su'o da
NI: ko'a roda ge broda gi brode
Another possibility is to use postnexes for sub-levels. That's different than what we introduced postnexes for in the first place, though. That would give:
CLL: ko'a ge broda gi brode vau roda
NI: ko'a da ge broda gi brode vau zo'au roda
And:
This could get horribly complicated, & I'm getting cold feet! To some extent the complexity arises from Lojban syntax's failure to base itself primarily on logical structures, so the blame lies at the feet of loglanists of old, but still, there's nothing we can do about that now. So anyway, I'm thinking that maybe we should switch to the following:
This is like a simple add-on to current Lojban, rather than any sort of radical innovation.
xorxes: Glorkable scope-BAhE sounds excellent.
And: Good. So linear order continues to have semantic import — it was a nice thought that that could be done away with, but it would work only if we could reengineer the syntax wholesale.
The scope-BAhE allow us to state, for example, that {na} is always {(BAhE-subordinate) na} — it should be quite straightforward, given the scope BAhE mechanism, to formulate rules for which elements can and can't have coordinate scope.
xorxes: Actually, I changed my mind about {na}. {na} can have coordinate scope, but only with negative terms. {no gerku naku gunta no nanmu} "no dog didn't attack no man" with coordinate scope should exapand as {no gerku cu gunta lo nanmu ije lo gerku cu gunta no nanmu ije lo gerku na gunta lo nanmu}. {na} can't have coordinate scope with afirmative quantifiers, but then neither can {no}. Afirmative and negative can't mix coordinately, because obviously they give a contradiction. It would also be contradictory to say coordinately {no gerku ja'aku gunta no nanmu}: "no dog does attack no man". It is clear that if we have {naku} mixed with affirmative quantifiers, the only reasonable glorking is subordinate scoping.