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Moral Hazard
Oppressing the 99%

Registered: Mar 2005
Location: with the 1%
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| quote: | Originally posted by gehzumteufel
thats part of it but a HUGE part of it is the way in which the people are or arent isolated. isolation has created languages such as ukrainian, swiss german, mexican spanish, portuguese, and the likes. also depending on the influences of tourism, economics, and social structure, the language can change dramatically in ways you wouldnt expect. |
With regard to isolation... I agree that it has created unique languages or unique dialects, however, the uniqueness is not what we're looking at here... we're talking about variety of words or methods of combining words/sounds/etc. In this regard, isolation would really work against the development of a language into a more complex form. Isolation cuts down on the number of users and likely on the need for using the language et al. This would result in a less, rather then more complex language. Part of the reason English is so complex is because it has had applications all over the world for hundreds of years now... each place where it is used has some unique attributes and interactions with other cultures... these interactions and unique requirements help to develope new words, styles of use, rhetoric devices, phrases, etc.
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| quote: | Originally posted by RickyM
you're just a shit version of Moral Hazard. At least he knows what he's talking about. |
| quote: | Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN
lol, i love it when moral feels the need to lay the smack down 
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Jun-11-2007 19:18
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Omega_M
Nostalgia

Registered: Jun 2005
Location: Ether
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There's got to be a basis for comparison of languages. Further, the evolution must depend on the number of years the language has been in existence and as moral said, how much time the civilization has invested in Arts and Culture, rather than simply fighting for survival. Larger number of alphabets may not necessarily point to the richness of a language. But I'm inclined to think that the variety of word (maybe even the grammar and structure ) that can be created out of the pool must be larger than other languages with lesser number of alphabets. More words should => better expression. I was reading about the use of Sanskrit language for machine level computer usage. (Link) . From what I understand, the language is known for its disambiguity of expression. Now, would this quality make it a better language than others ?
| quote: | In the past twenty years, much time, effort, and money has been expended on designing an unambiguous representation of natural languages to make them accessible to computer processing. These efforts have centered around creating schemata designed to parallel logical relations with relations expressed by the syntax and semantics of natural languages, which are clearly cumbersome and ambiguous in their function as vehicles for the transmission of logical data. Understandably, there is a widespread belief that natural languages are unsuitable for the transmission of many ideas that artificial languages can render with great precision and mathematical rigor.
But this dichotomy, which has served as a premise underlying much work in the areas of linguistics and artificial intelligence, is a false one. There is at least one language, Sanskrit, which for the duration of almost 1000 years was a living spoken language with a considerable literature of its own. Besides works of literary value, there was a long philosophical and grammatical tradition that has continued to exist with undiminished vigor until the present century. Among the accomplishments of the grammarians can be reckoned a method for paraphrasing Sanskrit in a manner that is identical not only in essence but in form with current work in Artificial Intelligence. This article demonstrates that a natural language can serve as an artificial language also, and that much work in AI has been reinventing a wheel millenia old. |
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Download and review ! Omega_M - In the Mix (Beta Version)
Originally posted by twilightki : It feels like something you'd listen to at 4 in the morning, or listen to in your car while you're going in a tunnel.
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Jun-11-2007 20:20
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gehzumteufel
In your ass

Registered: Nov 2005
Location: so cal
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| quote: | Originally posted by gehzumteufel
thats part of it but a HUGE part of it is the way in which the people are or arent isolated. isolation has created languages such as ukrainian, swiss german, mexican spanish, portuguese, and the likes. also depending on the influences of tourism, economics, and social structure, the language can change dramatically in ways you wouldnt expect. |
| quote: | Originally posted by Moral Hazard
With regard to isolation... I agree that it has created unique languages or unique dialects, however, the uniqueness is not what we're looking at here... we're talking about variety of words or methods of combining words/sounds/etc. In this regard, isolation would really work against the development of a language into a more complex form. Isolation cuts down on the number of users and likely on the need for using the language et al. This would result in a less, rather then more complex language. Part of the reason English is so complex is because it has had applications all over the world for hundreds of years now... each place where it is used has some unique attributes and interactions with other cultures... these interactions and unique requirements help to develope new words, styles of use, rhetoric devices, phrases, etc. |
reread the bolded part.
edit// isolation plays a big part but also the way in which trade influences languages is enormous. look at the english language for example. has a good amount of its roots in german because the angles and the saxons invading england. this has had a profound effect on the way that english is today.
Last edited by gehzumteufel on Jun-11-2007 at 22:37
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Jun-11-2007 22:30
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