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- Path: sparky!uunet!europa.asd.contel.com!paladin.american.edu!auvm!EID.ANL.GOV!GABRIEL
- Message-ID: <9211232328.AA09566@athens.eid.anl.gov>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.csg-l
- Date: Mon, 23 Nov 1992 17:28:30 CST
- Sender: "Control Systems Group Network (CSGnet)" <CSG-L@UIUCVMD.BITNET>
- From: John Gabriel <gabriel@EID.ANL.GOV>
- Subject: foundations of language (B nevin 921123 09:58:11)
- Lines: 125
-
- [From gabriel 921123 17:11 CST]
-
- >[From: Bruce Nevin (Mon 921123 09:58:11)]
-
- >No time to keep up, but as I sneaked a glance at the most recent
- >this AM this caught my eye:
-
- >(Bill Powers (921122.2000) ) --
- >/*****************************************************************************
- >* *
- >* I think the deaf community would have a lot to teach about what happens *
- >* when a group of people is brought together without any initial means of *
- >* communicating. I claim that someone would ALWAYS invent a language, *
- >* using whatever perceptions are easily manipulable as the tokens. In *
- >* other words, I claim that it isn't language that's inherent, but *
- >* ingenuity. *
- >*****************************************************************************/
-
- >When has a deaf community invented a language in the absence of
- >an environing community of people possessed of language who
- >intercommunicate with the deaf folks by whatever means they are
- >able?
-
- Don't fish communicate non verbally? e.g. the UK stickleback, or
- lots of tropical species while nesting, to say nothing of Bluegill?
-
- >You made a similar point, Penni. However, you went on to say:
-
- >Penni Sibun <sibun@PARC.XEROX.COM>
- >/*****************************************************************************
- >* *
- >* communication is a terribly important part of what human beings (and *
- >* all organisms!) do. language may or may not involve symbol *
- >* manipulation. but language is fundamentally communcation. wouldn't *
- >* it be a good idea to start studying a language at its foundations? *
- >*****************************************************************************/
-
- >I disagree that language "is fundamentally communication". Even
- >more basically, people use language to create information that
- >could not exist without language and could not have existed prior
- >to language.
-
- I'm really an amateur at this game, but it seems to me that a Shannon
- channel certainly communicates what the probable transitions of the
- source are. What this means depends on context. Many of the things
- that interest me seem to be descriptions of traversals of real or
- hypothetical decision trees, the real traversals often being to solicit
- the an estimate of probable truth of a proposition determining which
- branch to take at the sender's current node. The hypothetical decision
- trees (penni's very good example - X's room is down the hall on the right)
- being to establish context about an "aforesaid" which can hencforth
- be abbreviated by the symbol sequence "X's room" (avery's comment).
- Neither Chomsky or any of the programming language people like myself
- have any trouble with this. Question - probably trivial to answer -
- are the programming languages of interest to linguists as languages
- for communication with machines? I'm reminded of a comment of mine from
- years ago - a program is a contract between people and machines
- specifying what each must do to achieve some result desired by people.
-
-
- >This is not to say that the perceptions ("meanings") with which
- >words are correlated could not have existed, though some
- >categories may well not be universal, but rather that
- >higher-level organizations of those perceptions (which are
- >themselves perceptions, of course) are not merely communicated by
- >means of language, but are consensually created by means of
- >language.
-
- One of the nice things about programming languages is that there are
- ANSI standards for their meanings and working models for their
- understanding by machines. Yes, they are truly dull for linguists,
- but perhaps looking at a context free grammar might simplify the
- discussion because the meaning of a term cannot change subtly in the
- middle of a paragraph - or perhaps it can, but only in well defined
- ways. A dumb question perhaps, but is it worth thinking about? For
- example the elementary concepts of LISP 1.5 (the undefined terms of`
- axiopmatic theories) can be used to build artifacts having apparently
- complex behaviours - e.g. LIZA. Are these as worthy of study as the
- PCT ARM, and if so why (or if not why). And any real light PCT could shed
- on the process of making good software will make its discoverer rich
- and famous.
-
- >So I am arguing that communication is not at the foundations of
- >language but rather antecedent to them. To be sure,
- >communication has an important role in the story Harris proposes
- >about the evolutionary origins of language (in _Language and
- >Information_ and in _A Theory of Language and Information: a
- >mathematical approach_). But to get at the foundations of
- >language you must study something that is unique to language.
-
- >Just to head off a red herring, note that Shannon/Weaver
- >communication theory is not about communicating in this sense
- >either, any more than its near synonym information theory is
- >about meaning in any general sense of the word.
-
- Again, perhaps a dumb comment. The original Shannon Weaver paper
- was a very abstract affair. When I look at either ENIGMA (the
- biography of Turing, or the account of Bletchley Hall 1938-1945)
- or back issues of CRYPTOLOGIA, these make me inclined to argue that
- the red herring is not perhaps as much of a false trail as you might
- think. But it seems clear to me that there are subtleties in bruce's
- view of language I will not appreciate until we have more shared
- experience. Some of the recent articles about Rosetta Stone
- like problems that are still open might be of interest to linguists,
- and have at least to me a VERY Shannon flavour. Bruce will know of
- Bill Woods I am sure from Bill's long association with BBN. How much
- difference really is there between Shannon's traversals of a Markov
- Diagram, and an individual's traversals of one of Bill's semantic nets, or
- successive retrievals from penni's KB?. Or for that matter the
- successive retrievals from a Kanerva database as the algorithm seeks
- the closest match to a given pattern - Well, perhaps that's a bit
- far fetched. But how about two very similar Kanerva Databases, and
- the mapping between them by retrieval of closest matches to a
- succession of different patterns!! Perhaps that question IS
- worth some thought.
-
- With Greetings to all, and malice to none. Avery's excerpt from another
- SIG suggests that our flames are low temperature. Perhaps the diversity
- of interests here is a damper for the free radicals of flame propagation.
- No pun intended.
-
- Well, I probably need to find time to read Harris as bruce suggests,
- before succumbing to fatal hoof in mouth disease.
-
- John Gabriel (gabriel@eid.anl.gov)
-