ontologists searching for the Holy Grail may find the referenced paper interesting, esp. wrt events.
Lera Boroditsky (@leraboroditsky) tweeted at 3:03 PM on Mon, Sep 26, 2016:
Is 'eating' universal? In Maniq language, you hãw rice, kap meat, lik mangoes, paŋ yams, and hop soup. Cool paper:
https://t.co/biPLk74Iba
(https://twitter.com/leraboroditsky/status/780498004511956992?s=03)
Get the official Twitter app at https://twitter.com/download?s=13
Hmm. Indeed natural language does tolerate ambiguity, and so if there is no knowledge about what food is specifically eaten, languages do tend to permit a generic “eat”. I.e., “Mary ate something but we don’t know what it was.” I would indeed be surprised if in Maniq one couldn’t say something like this. It would seem that one then would be forced to some kind of disjunction of the verbal kinds of eats/ingestion, which gets unwieldy: “Mary chewed something soft, or bit on a hard object, or ate something with little biting or chewing, or ate something with spitting out of hard fibers, or consumed nutritious/savory liquids, or drank non-nutritious liquids, or inhaled medicinal smoke (without exhaling), or inhaled and blew out smoke”. Not to say that that is impossible, but it seems unlikely. And it seems this is about mostly putting things in your mouth, not necessarily “eats”. So perhaps it’s a kind of incorporation of an object into the verbal? I don’t know. Think of some of our English verbal nouns: wood-working, basket-weaving, painting, sculpting, i.e., all working of some material with hands. Just a thought.
Joe: Do you know what Mary {disjunction of the above}?
Sally: No, I don’t know what Mary {disjunction of the above}. Do you?
Joe: I think she ate something with spitting out of hard fibers.
Possibly the ambiguity is pushed up higher, e.g., “Mary did something”. But it’s unclear whether Maniq has such a generic verbal, possibly indicating a generic event.
Thanks,
Leo
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good questions.
On Oct 1, 2016 3:46 PM, "Obrst, Leo J." <lob...@mitre.org> wrote:
>
> Hmm. Indeed natural language does tolerate ambiguity, and so if there is no knowledge about what food is specifically eaten, languages do tend to permit a generic “eat”. I.e., “Mary ate something but we don’t know what it was.”
or "Mary 'ingested' (or took or whatever) something but we don't know if she ate it or smoked it or drank it etc. (In Egypt one "drinks" cigarettes).
I would indeed be surprised if in Maniq one couldn’t say something like this. It would seem that one then would be forced to some kind of disjunction of the verbal kinds of eats/ingestion, which gets unwieldy: “Mary chewed something soft, or bit on a hard object, or ate something with little biting or chewing, or ate something with spitting out of hard fibers, or consumed nutritious/savory liquids, or drank non-nutritious liquids, or inhaled medicinal smoke (without exhaling), or inhaled and blew out smoke”. Not to say that that is impossible, but it seems unlikely. And it seems this is about mostly putting things in your mouth, not necessarily “eats”. So perhaps it’s a kind of incorporation of an object into the verbal? I don’t know. Think of some of our English verbal nouns: wood-working, basket-weaving, painting, sculpting, i.e., all working of some material with hands. Just a thought.
Strikes me as a very general point. wherever we (and I mean we English speakers, but maybe others too) can conceptualize a genus with species we can ask whether natural languages explicitly support similar divisions. it certainly makes intuitive sense, but then again it's really a matter of scientific research. what are the evolutionary advantages/disadvantages, either way.
>
>
>
> Joe: Do you know what Mary {disjunction of the above}?
>
> Sally: No, I don’t know what Mary {disjunction of the above}. Do you?
>
> Joe: I think she ate something with spitting out of hard fibers.
>
>
>
> Possibly the ambiguity is pushed up higher, e.g., “Mary did something”. But it’s unclear whether Maniq has such a generic verbal, possibly indicating a generic event.
>
>
I'd love to know what the original author would have to say.
Given the demonstrably astounding variety of natural languages, however, I would expect to find very few universals along these lines. it might seem odd to us not to have a generic eating term, but what is the cost of not having such a term, for particular societies? I have no idea, but if we did not have "eat" I'm not sure that would be a problem.
I'm trying to think of a comparable example in English. there must be at least one, but I always find myself starting with a generic term!
howsabout "he scratched/rubbed/massaged/etc. his chin"? He chinned? ;)
gregg
>
> I'm trying to think of a comparable example in English. there must be at least one, but I always find myself starting with a generic term!
>
> howsabout "he scratched/rubbed/massaged/etc. his chin"? He chinned? ;)
>
more generally: it's unclear to me at least that there is any kind of universal abstraction at work in natural languages. put differently: languages drive abstraction, not the other way around.
toy example: "he scratched his chin", "he drank a beer". in principle there is no reason a natural language could not subsume both of these under a single generic verb, say "fragished". stranger things have happened.
Gregg
Similar thing: he scratched his chin = > he chinned. It seems that the predicate if closing over one argument -- i.e., “saturating” it with a specific object: he scratched chin: scratch (X, Y) = > scratch(X, chin), and then lexicalizing the latter.
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Correction: “is closing over”
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On Oct 2, 2016 11:08 AM, "John F Sowa" <so...@bestweb.net> wrote:
>
> On 10/2/2016 11:40 AM, Pat Hayes wrote:
>>
>> While linguistically fascinating, none of this seems to be relevant
>> to ontology engineering, as far as I can see.
>
>
> I agree that these examples don't tell us anything that we haven't
> seen before: People perceive, think, talk, act, and react to the
> same kinds of things in many different ways.
>
> The only people who might be bothered by it are those who still
> hope to find some ideal, perfect, universal top-level ontology.
>
indeed. I think such research is therapeutically useful wrt to ontology engineering. being scientifically, empirically based, it cannot be (easily) countered by philosophical rationalizations.
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