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Re: does conlanging change your sense of reality?

From:RoseRose <faithfulscribe@...>
Date:Wednesday, April 1, 2009, 13:49
That's delicious.  Thanks for the "secret" peek into Lojban humor.  I have
the book, and there weren't too many chuckles in it.
RR

On Mon, Mar 30, 2009 at 3:30 PM, Brett Williams <mungojelly@...>wrote:

> (CCed to the lojban-list, since I thought they might want to see what > I had to say here.) > > > On Mon, Mar 30, 2009 at 8:57 AM, RoseRose <faithfulscribe@...> > wrote: > > I'm personally of the Whorfian persuasion that different languages > "cause" > > different forms of thinking and different thoughts therefore arise. > Having > > been so deeply engaged with Glide for 10 years, I've noticed I parse the > > world differently--see process, for instance, more foregrounded than > things, > > flow more than form. This is of course very subjective and not all that > > easy to describe. I am curious if anyone else sees effects in your > > reality-sense that you attribute to your conlanging activities in any > way? > > > I've thought about this some over the years that I've studied Lojban, > since Sapir-Whorf is an important part of Lojban's history and > mythology. I'm not sure exactly how Lojban was supposed to change how > I think, and it's always difficult in life of course to tell one > thread of cause from another, but I do think I might have a sense of > some kind of effect that it's had on me. > > It affects most strongly of course how I think and feel about > communication. It's my sense that the cultural differences in > communication between Lojbanistan and the outside world are at least > as important as the linguistic differences. Lojban is this very > modular, tinker-toy-type language, where you can basically put > whatever you want in a sentence by attaching things to the sides of > other things. But it would be perfectly possible to use that > structure to build ordinary sentences, restrained by conventional > forms and meanings. There is also an exploratory, creative attitude > in the way Lojban is used which feels to me essential in how it's > changed my thought. > > I'll give an example which I think tells a lot about Lojban culture. > I kind of feel like I'm revealing a secret, in a way-- I mean it's not > secret at all, it's openly logged all the time in fact, but it's an > open secret because it's encoded into a strange cypheric creature > called a "lujvo". :) The lujvo I'm thinking of is "cinsne", which is > made from "cin" for "cinse", to be sexual, and "sne" for "senva", to > dream, and means to have a wet dream. It is increasingly common & > traditional to say to someone who is heading off to bed from > Lojbanistan: "ko cinsne" -- Have a wet dream! (It's meant somewhat in > jest, but not haha-funny, & it comes from a long shared strange > Lojbanic sense of humor and absurdity.) > > So there has been some effect on my thinking from using a language > that's so modular, adjustable, free, structural. But there's been at > least as much change in how I think from the cultural experience of > living part of my life in a linguistic community that's there mostly > for the purpose of exploring language itself, and with a language on > their tongues and fingertips to bend to their whims and wills. Loglan > and Middle Lojban were similar to today's Lojban grammatically, but I > think provoked a very different experience in those who related to > them. I would expect that the next generation's Lojban, which is > growing out of the conversations and stories and songs and > translations of today, will have yet again an entirely different > effect on those who learn it. > > I suppose the main conclusion my studies of Lojban have driven me to > about Sapir-Whorf is that language is not just a tool used by a > society, but a vessel for much of the knowledge and social structure > of a society. It's that hidden dimension of language which I believe > is most powerful in structuring how we think, act and live. > > <3, > mungojelly > AKA la stela selckiku >