“During covid” I got really interested in language, and was thinking of making a conlang.
It would be an intentional pidgin (and so very very simple in some sense) that was on the verge of creolizing but which would have small simple words with clear definitions that could be used to “ungramaticalize” everything that had been grammaticalized in some existing human language…
...this project to “lexicalize”-all-the-grammar(!) defeated me.
I want to ramble at length about my defeat! <3
The language or system I was trying to wrap my head around would be kind of like Ithkuil, except, like… hopefully actually usable by real humans?
But the rabbit-hole-problems here are rampant. There are so many ideas here. It is so easy to get bad data and be confused about it. Here is a story of being pleasantly confused over and over...
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
I. Digression Into A Search For A Periodic Table Of “Grammar” I.A. Grammar Is Hard, Lets Just Be Moody As A Practice Run I.A.1. Digression Into Frege’s Exploration Of ONLY The Indicative Mood I.A.2. Commentary on Frege, Seeking Extensions To The Interogrative Moods I.A.2.a. Seeking briefly to sketch better evidentiality markers in a hypothetical language (and maybe suggesting methods thereby) I.A.2.a.i. Procedural commentary on evidentiality concomittment to the challenges of understanding the interogative mood. I.B.1. Trying To Handle A Simple Case: Moods In Diving Handsigns I.B.1.a Diving Handsigns Have Pragmatically Weird Mood (Because Avoiding Drowning Is The Most Important Thing) But They are Simple (Because It Is For Hobbyists With Shit In Their Mouth) I.B.2. Trying To Find The Best Framework For Mood Leads To… Nenets? I.B.2.a. But Nenets Is Big, And Time Was Short, And Kripke Is Always Dogging Me, And I’m A Pragmatist At Heart I.B.2.a. Frege Dogs Me Less But Still… Really? II. It Is As If Each Real Natural Language Is Almost Anti-Epistemic And So Languages Collectively ARE Anti-Epistemic?
...
I. Digression Into A Search For A Periodic Table Of “Grammar”
That reddit post, that I found while writing this, was written maybe a year after I tried to whip one of these up just for mood in a month or three of “work to distract me from the collapse of civilization during covid”… and failed!
((I mean… I probably did succeed at distracting myself from the collapse of civilization during covid, but I did NOT succeed at “inventing the omnilang semantic codepoint set”. No such codepoints are on my harddrive, so I’m pretty sure I failed. The overarching plan that I expected to take a REALLY long time was to have modular control of semantics, isolating grammars, and phonology all working orthogonally, so I could eventually generate an infinite family of highly regular conlangs at will, just from descriptions of how they should work.))
So a first and hopefully simplest thing I was planning on building, was a sort of periodic table of “mood”.
Just mood… I could do the rest later… and yet even this “small simplest thing” defeated me!
(Also note that the most centrally obvious overarching thing would be to do a TAME system with Tense, Aspect, Mood, and Evidentiality. I don’t think Voice is that complicated… Probably? But maybe that redditor knows something I don’t?)
I.A. Grammar Is Hard, Lets Just Be Moody As A Practice Run
Part of the problem I ran into with this smaller question is: “what the fuck even is a mood??”
Like in terms of its “total meaning” what even are these things? What is their beginning and ends? How are they bounded?
Like if we’re going to be able, as “analytic philosophers or language” to form a logically coherent theory of natural human language pragmatics and semantics that enables translation from any natural utterance by any human into and through a formally designed (not just a pile of matrices) way to translate that utterance into some sort of Characteristica Universalis… what does that look like?
In modern English grammar we basically only have two moods in our verb marking grammar: the imperative and the indicative (and maybe the interrogative mood, but that mostly just happens mostly in the word order)...
(...old European linguists seemed to have sometimes thought “real grammar” was just happening in the verbs, where you’d sometimes find them saying, of a wickedly complex language, that “it doesn’t even have grammar” because it didn’t have wickedly complex verb conjugation.)
And in modern English we also have the the modal auxiliary verbs that (depending on where you want to draw certain lines) include: can, could, may, might, must, shall, should, will, would, and ought!
Also sometimes there are some small phrases which do similar work but don’t operate grammatically the same way.
(According to Wikipedia-right-now Mandarin Chinese has a full proper modal auxiliary verb for “daring to do something”! Which is so cool! And I’m not gonna mention it again in this whole comment, because I’m telling a story about a failure, and “dare” isn’t part of the story! Except like: avoiding rabbit holes like these is key to making any progress, and yet if you don’t explore them all you probably will never get a comprehensive understanding, and that’s the overall tension that this sprawling comment is trying to illustrate.)
In modern English analytic philosophy we also invented “modal” logic which is about “possibility” and “necessity”. And this innovation in symbolic logic might capture successfully formally capture “can” and “must” (which are “modal auxiliary verbs)… but it doesn’t have almost anything to do with the interrogative mood. Right? I think?
In modern English, we have BOTH an actual grammatical imperative mood with verb-changes-and-everything, but we also have modal auxiliary verbs like “should” (and the archaic “may”).
Is the change in verb conjugation for imperative, right next to “should” and “may” pointless duplication… or not? Does it mean essentially the same thing to say “Sit down!” vs “You should sit down!” …or not?
Consider lots of sentences like “He can run”, “He could run”, “He may run”, etc.
But then notice that “He can running”, “He could running”, “He may running” all sound wrong (but “he can be running, “he could be running”, and “he may be running” restore the sound of real English).
This suggests that “-ing” and “should” are somewhat incompatible… but not 100%? When I hear “he should be running” it is a grammatical statement that can’t be true if “he” is known to the speaker to be running right now.
The speaker must not know for the sentence to work!
Our hypothetical shared English-parsing LAD subsystems which hypothetically generate the subjective sense of “what sounds right and wrong as speech” thinks that active present things are slightly structurally incompatible with whatever modal auxiliary verbs are doing, in general, with some kind of epistemic mediation!
Modal verbs generally accompany the base (infinitive) form of another verb having semantic content.
With “semantics” (on the next Wikipedia page) defined as:
Semantics is the study of linguisticmeaning. It examines what meaning is, how words get their meaning, and how the meaning of a complex expression depends on its parts. Part of this process involves the distinction between sense and reference. Sense is given by the ideas and concepts associated with an expression while reference is the object to which an expression points. Semantics contrasts with syntax, which studies the rules that dictate how to create grammatically correct sentences, and pragmatics, which investigates how people use language in communication.
So like… it kind seems like the existing philosophic and pedagogical frameworks here can barely wrap their head around “the pragmatics of semantics” or “the semantics of pragmatics” or “the referential content of an imperative sentence as a whole” or any of this sort of thing.
Maybe linguists and ESL teachers and polyglots have ALL given up on the “what does this mean and what’s going on in our heads” questions…
...but then the philosophers (to whom this challenge should naturally fall) don’t even have a good clean answer for THE ONE EASIEST MOOD!!! (At least not to my knowledge right now.)
I.A.1. Digression Into Frege’s Exploration Of ONLY The Indicative Mood
Frege attacked this stuff kinda from scratch (proximate to his invention of kinda the entire concept of symbolic logic in general) in a paper “Ueber Sinn und Bedeutung” which has spawned SO SO MANY people who start by explaining what Frege said, and then explaining other philosopher’s takes on it, and then often humbly sneaking in their own take within this large confusing conversation.
Anyway, the point of bringing up Frege is that he had a sort of three layer system, where utterable sentences in the indicative mood had connotative and denotative layers and the denontative layers had two sublayers. (Connotation is thrown out to be treated later… and then never really returned to.)
Each part of speech (but also each sentence (which makes more sense given that sentence CAN BE a subphrase within a larger sentence)) could be analyzed for its denotation in term the two things (senses and references) from the title of the paper.
All speechstuff might have “reference” (what it points to in the extended external context that exists) and a “sense” (the conceptual machinery reliably evoked, in a shared way, in the minds of all capable interpreters of a sentence by each part of the speechstuff, such that this speechstuff could cause the mind to find the thing that was referred to).
“DOG” then has a reference to all the dogs and/or doglike things out there such such that the word “DOG” can be used to “de re refer” to what “DOG” obviously can be used to refer to “out there”.
Then, “DOG” might also have a sense of whatever internal conceptual machinery “DOG” evokes in a mind to be able to perform that linkage. In so maybe “DOG” also “de dicto refers” to this “sense of what dogs are in people’s minds”???
Then, roughly, Frege proposed that a sentence collects up all the senses in the individual words and mixes them together.
This OVERALL COMBINED “sense of the sentence” (a concept machine for finding stuff in reality) would be naturally related to the overall collection of all the senses of all of the parts of speech. And studying how the senses of words linked into the sense of the sentence was what “symbolic logic” was supposed to be a clean externalized theoretical mirror of.
Once we have a complete concept machine mentally loaded up as “the sense of the sentence” this concept machine could be used to examine the world (or the world model, or whatever) to see if there is a match.
The parts of speech have easy references. “DOG” extends to “the set of all the dogs out there” and “BROWN” extends to “all the brown things out there” and “BROWN DOG” is just the intersection of these sets. Easy peasy!
Then perhaps (given that we’re trying to push “sense” and “reference” as far as we can to keep the whole system parsimonious as a theory for how indicative sentences work) we could say “the ENTIRE sentence refers to Truth” (and, contrariwise, NO match between the world and the sense of the sentence means “the sentence refers to Falsehood”).
That is, to Frege, depending on how you ready him “all true sentences refer to the category of Truth itself”.
Aside from the fact that this is so galaxy-brained and abstract that it is probably a pile of bullshit… a separate problem arises in that… it is hard to directly say much here about “the imperative mood”!
Maybe it has something to say about the interrogative mood?
I.A.2. Commentary on Frege, Seeking Extensions To The Interogrative Moods
Maybe when you ask a question, pragmatically, it is just “the indicative mood but as a two player game instead of a one player game”?
Maybe uttering a sentence in the interrogative mood is a way for “player one” to offer “a sense” to “player two” without implying that they know how the sense refers (to Truth of Falsehood or whatever).
They might be sort of “cooperatively hoping for” player two to take “the de dicto reference to the sense of the utterance of player one” and check that sense (which player one “referred to”?) against player two’s own distinct world model (which would be valuable if player two has better mapped some parts of the actual world than player one has)?
If player two answers the question accurately, then the combined effect for both of them is kind of like what Frege suggests is occurring in a single lonely mind when that mind reads and understands the indicative form of “the same sentence” and decides that they are true based on comparing them to memory and so on. Maybe?
Except the first mind who hears an answer to a question still has sort of not grounded directly to the actual observables or their own memories or whatever. It isn’t literally mentally identical.
If player one “learned something” from hearing a question answered (and player one is human rather than a sapient AI), it might, neurologically, be wildly distinct from “learning something” by direct experience!
Now… there’s something to be said for this concern already being gramaticalized (at least in other languages) in the form of “evidentiality”, such that interrogative moods and evidential markers should “unify somehow”.
Hypothetically, evidential marking could show up as a sentence final particle, but I think in practice it almost always shows up as a marker on verbs.
And then, if we were coming at this from the perspective of AI, and having a stable and adequate language for talking to AI, a sad thing is that the evidentiality markers are almost always based on folk psychology, not on the real way that actual memories work in a neo-modern civilization running on top of neurologically baseline humans with access to the internet :-(
I.A.2.a. Seeking briefly to sketch better evidentiality markers in a hypothetical language (and maybe suggesting methods thereby)
I went to Wikipedia’s Memory Category and took all the articles that had a title in the from of “<adjective phrase> <noun>” where <noun> was “memory” or “memories”.
ONLY ONE was plural! And so I report that here as the “weird example”: Traumatic memories.
Hypothetically then, we could have a language where everyone was obliged to mark all main verbs as being based on “traumatic” vs “non-traumatic” memories?
((So far as I’m aware, there’s no language on earth that is obliged to mark whether a verb in a statement is backed by memories that are traumatic or not.))
Scanning over all the Wikipedia articles I can find here (that we might hypothetically want to mark as an important distinction) in verbs and/or sentences, the adjectives that can modify a “memory” article are (alphabetically): Adaptive, Associative, Autobiographical, Childhood, Collective, Context-dependent, Cultural, Destination, Echoic, Eidetic, Episodic, Episodic-like, Exosomatic, Explicit, External, Eyewitness, Eyewitness (child), Flashbulb, Folk, Genetic. Haptic, Iconic, Implicit, Incidental, Institutional, Intermediate-term, Involuntary, Long-term, Meta, Mood-dependent, Muscle, Music-evoked autobiographical, Music-related, National, Olfactory, Organic, Overgeneral autobiographical, Personal-event, Plant, Prenatal, Procedural, Prospective, Recognition, Reconstructive, Retrospective, Semantic, Sensory, Short-term, Sparse distributed, Spatial, Time-based prospective, Transactive, and Transsaccadic.
In the above sentence, I said roughly
“The adjectives that can modify a ‘memory’ article are (alphabetically): <list>”
The main verb of that sentence is technically “are” but “modify” is also salient, and already was sorta-conjugated into the “can-modify” form.
Hypothetically (if speaking a language where evidentiality must be marked, and imagining marking it with all the features that could work differently in various forms of memory) I could mark the entire sentence I just uttered in terms of my evidence for the sentence itself!
I believe that sentence itself was probably: + Institutional (via “Wikipedia”) and + Context Dependent (I’ll forget it after reading and processing wikipedia falls out of my working memory) and + Cultural (based on the culture of english-speaking wikipedians) and + Exosomatic (I couldn’t have spoken the sentence aloud with my mouth without intense efforts of memorization, but I could easily compose the sentence in writing with a text editor), and + Explicit (in words, not not-in-words), and + Folk (because wikipedians are just random people, not Experts), and + Meta (because in filtering the wikipedia articles down to that list I was comparing ways I have of memorizing to claims about how memory works), and + National (if you think of the entire Anglosphere as being a sort of nation separated by many state boundaries, so that 25-year-old Canadians and Australians and Germans-who-learned English young can’t ever all have the same Prime Minister without deeply restructuring various States, but are still “born together” in some tribal sense, and they all can reason and contribute to the same English language wikipedia), and maybe + Procedural (in that I used procedures to manipulate the list of kinds of memories by hand, and if I made procedural errors in composing it (like accidentally deleting a word and not noticing) then I might kinda have lied-by-accident due to my hands “doing data manipulation” wrongly), and definitely + Reconstructive (from many many inputs and my own work), and + Semantic (because words and means are pretty central here).
Imagine someone tried to go through an essay that they had written in the past and do a best-effort mark-up of ALL of the verbs with ALL of these, and then look for correlations?
(And maybe that is close to one or more of the standard Inferential evidential markers?)
Likewise “Cultural” and “National” and “Institutional” and “Folk” also might go together a lot?
They they link up somewhat nicely with a standard evidentiality marker that often shows up which is “Reportative”!
So here is the sentence again, re-written, with some coherent evidential and modal tags attached, that is trying to simply and directly speak to the challenges:
“These granular adjectives mightvalidly-reportatively-inferably-modify the concept of memory: <list>.”
One or more reportatives sorta convergently shows up in many language that have obligate evidential marking.
The thing I really want here is to indicate that “I’m mentally outsourcing a reconciliation of kinds of memories and kinds of evidential markers to the internet institution of Wikipedia via elaborate procedures”.
Sometimes, some languages require that what not say “reportatively” but specifically drill down to distinguish between “Quotative” (where the speaker heard from someone who saw it and is being careful with attribution) vs “Hearsay” (which is what the listener of a Quotative or a Hearsay evidential claim should probably use when they relate the same fact again because now they are offering hearsay (at least if you think of each conversation as a court and each indicative utterance in a conversation as testimony in that court)).
Since Wikipedia does not allow original research, it is essentially ALL hearsay, I think? Maybe? And so maybe it’d be better to claim:
“These granular adjectives might-viaInternetHearsay-inferably-validly-modify the concept of memory: <list>.”
For all I know (this is not an area of expertise for me at all) there could be a lot of other “subtypes of reportative evidential markers” in real existing human languages so that some language out there could say this easily???
I’m not sure if I should keep the original “can” or be happy about this final version’s use of “might”.
Also, “validly” snuck in there, and I’m not sure if I mean “scientificallyValidly” (tracking the scientific concept of validity) or “morallyValidly” (in the sense that I “might not be writing pure bullshit and so I might not deserve moral sanction”)?
Dear god. What even is this comment! Why!? Why is it so hard?!
Where were we again?
I.A.2.a.i. Procedural commentary on evidentiality concomittment to the challenges of understanding the interogative mood.
Ahoy there John and David!
I’m not trying to write an essay (exactly), I’m writing a comment responding to you! <3
I think I don’t trust language to make “adequate” sense. Also, I don’t trust humans to “adequately” understand language. I don’t trust common sense utterances to “adequately” capture anything in a clean and good and tolerably-final way.
The OP seems to say “yeah, this language stuff is safe to rely on to be basically complete” and I think I’m trying to say “no! that’s not true! that’s impossible!” because language is a mess. Everywhere you look it is wildly half-assed, and vast, and hard to even talk about, and hard to give examples of, and combintorially interacting with its own parts.
The digression just now into evidentiality was NOT something I worked on back in 2020, but it is illustrative of the sort of rabbit holes that one finds almost literally everywhere one looks, when working on “analytic meta linguistics” (or whatever these efforts could properly be called).
Remember when I said this at the outset?
“During covid” I got really interested in language, and was thinking of making a conlang that would be an intentional pidgin (and so very very simple in some sense) that was on the verge of creolizing but which would have small simple words with clear definitions that could be used to “ungramaticalize” everything that had been grammaticalized in some existing human language…
...this project to “lexicalize”-all-the-grammar(!) defeated me, and I want to digress here to briefly to talk about my defeat! <3
It would be kind of like Ithkuil, except, like… hopefully actually usable by real humans.
The reason I failed to create anything like a periodic table of grammar for a pidgin style conlang is because there are so many nooks and crannies! …and they ALL SEEM TO INTERACT!
Maybe if I lived to be 200 years old, I could spend 100 of those years in a library, designing a language for children to really learn to speak as “a second toy language” that put them upstream of everything in every language? Maybe?
However, if I could live to 200 and spend 100 years on this, then probably so could all the other humans, and then… then languages would take until you were 30 to even speak properly, I suspect, and it would just loop around to not being possible for me again even despite living to 200?
I.B.1. Trying To Handle A Simple Case: Moods In Diving Handsigns
When I was working on this, I was sorta aiming to get something VERY SMALL at first because that’s often the right way to make progress in software. Gettest cases workinginside of a framework.
So, it seemed reasonable to find “a REAL language” that people really need and use and so on, but something LESS than the full breadth of everything one can generally find being spoken in a tiny village on some island near Papua New Guinea?
So I went looking into scuba hand signs with the hope of translating a tiny and stupidly simple language and just successfully send THAT to some kind of Characteristia Universalis prototype to handle the “semantics of the pragmatics of modal operators”.
The goal wasn’t to handle tense, aspect, evidentiality, voice, etc in general. I suspect that diving handsigns don’t even have any of that!
But it would maybe be some progress to be able to translate TOY languages into a prototype of an ultimate natural meta-language.
I.B.1.a Diving Handsigns Have Pragmatically Weird Mood (Because Avoiding Drowning Is The Most Important Thing) But They are Simple (Because It Is For Hobbyists With Shit In Their Mouth)
So the central juicy challenge was that in diving manuals, a lot of times their hand signs are implicitly in the imperative mood.
The dive leader’s orders are strong, and mostly commands, by default.
The dive followers mostly give suggestions (unless they relate to safety, in which case they aren’t supposed to use them except for really reals, because even if they use them wrongly, the dive leader has to end the dive if there’s a chance of a risk of drowning based on what was probably communicated).
Then, in this linguistic situation, it turns out they just really pragmatically need stuff like this “question mark” handsign which marks the following or preceding handsign (or two) as having been in the interrogative mood:
And so I felt like I HAD to be able to translate the interrogative and imperative moods “cleanly” into something cleanly formal, even just for this “real toy language”.
If I was going to match Frege’s successes in a way that is impressive enough to justify happening in late 2020 (222 years after the 1892 publication of “Sense and Reference”), then… well… maybe I could use this to add one or two signs to “diving sign language” and actually generate technology from my research, as a proof that the research wasn’t just a bunch of bullshit!
(Surely there has been progress here in philosophy in two centuries… right?!)
((As a fun pragmatic side note, there’s a kind of interpretation here of this diving handsign where “it looks like a question mark” but also its kind of interesting how the index finger is “for pointing” and that pointing symbol is “broken or crooked” so even an alien might be able to understand that as “I can’t point, but want to be able to point”?!? Is “broken indexicality” the heart of the interrogative mood somehow? If we wish to RETVRN TO NOVA ZEMBLA must we eschew this entire mood maybe??))
Like… the the imperative and interrogative moods are the default moods for a lot of diving handsigns!
You can’t just ignore this and only think about the indicative mood all the time, like it was still the late 1800s… right? <3
So then… well… what about “the universal overarching framework” for this?
I.B.2. Trying To Find The Best Framework For Mood Leads To… Nenets?
So I paused without any concrete results on the diving stuff (because making Anki decks for that and trying it in a swimming pool would take forever and not give me a useful output) to think about where it was headed.
And now I wanted to know “what are all the Real Moods?”
And a hard thing here is (1) English doesn’t have that many in its verbs and (2) linguists often only count the ones that show up in verb conjugation as “real” (for counting purposes), and (3) there’s a terrible terrible problem in getting a MECE list of The Full List Of Real Moods from “all the languages”.
Point three is non-obvious. The issue is, from language to language, they might lump and split the whole space of possible moods to mark differently so that one language might use “the mood the linguist decided to call The Irrealis Mood” only for telling stories with magic in them (but also they are animists and think the world is full of magic), and another language might use something a linguist calls “irrealis” for that AND ALSO other stuff like basic if/then logic!
So… I was thinking that maybe the thing to do would be to find the SINGLE language that, to the speakers of that language and linguists studying them, had the most DISTINCT moods with MECE marking.
This language turns out to be: Nenets. It has (I think) ~16 moods, marked inside the verb conjugation like it has been allowed to simmer and get super weird and barely understandable to outsiders for >1000 years, and marking mood is obligatory! <3
In all types of data used in this study, the narrative mood is the most frequently used non-indicative mood marker. The narrative mood is mutually exclusive with any other mood markers. However, it co-occurs with tense markers, the future and the general past (preterite), as well as the habitual aspect. Combined with the future tense, it denotes past intention or necessity (Nikolaeva 2014: 93), and combined with the preterite marker, it encodes more remote past (Ljublinskaja & Malčukov 2007: 459–461). Most commonly, however, the narrative mood appears with no additional tense marking, denoting a past action or event.
So… so I think they have a “once upon a time” mood? Or maybe it is like how technical projects often make commitments at the beginning like “we’re are only going to use technology X” and then this is arguably a mistake, and yet arguably everyone has to live with it forever, and so you tell the story about how “we decided to only, in the future, use technology X”… and that would be marked as “it was necessary in the deep past to use technology X going forward” with this “narrative mood” thingy that Nenets reportedly has? So you might just say something like “we narratively-use technology X” in that situation?
Maybe?
I.B.2.a. But Nenets Is Big, And Time Was Short, And Kripke Is Always Dogging Me, And I’m A Pragmatist At Heart
And NONE OF THIS got at what I actually think is often going on when, like at an animal level, where “I hereby allow you to eat” has a deep practical meaning!
Like, I think maybe “allowing someone to eat” could be done by marking “eat” with the Jussive Mood (that Nenets has) and then if we’re trying to unpack that into some kind of animalistic description of all of what is kinda going on the phrase “you jussive-eat” might mean something like:
“I will not sanction you with my socially recognized greater power if you try to eat, despite how I normally would sanction you, and so, game theoretically, it would be in your natural interest to eat like everyone usually wants to eat (since the world is Malthusian by default) but would normally be restrained from eating by fear of social sanction (since food sharing is a core loop in social mammals and eating in front of others without sharing will make enemies and disrupt the harmony of the group and so on), but it would be wise of you to do so urgently in this possibly short period of special dispensation, from me, who is the recognized controller of rightful and morally tolerated access to the precious resource that is food”.
Now we could ask, is my make-believe Nenets phrase “you jussive-eat” similar to English “you should eat” or “you may eat” or “you can eat” or none-of-these-and-something-else or what?
Maybe English would really need something very complexly marked with status and pomp to really communicate it properly like “I allow you to eat, hereby, with this speech act”?
Or maybe I still don’t have a good grasp on the underlying mood stuff and am fundamentally misunderstanding Nenets and this mood? It could be!
“There exist no possible worlds where it is possible for you to not pay me for the food I’m selling you.”
The above are NOT the SAME! At all!
But maybe that’s the strawman sketch… but every time I try to drop into the symbolic logic literature around Kripke I come out of it feeling like they are entirely missing the idea of like… orders and questions and statements, and how orders and questions and statements are different from each other and really important to what people use modals in language and practically unmentioned by the logicians :-(
I.B.2.b. Frege Dogs Me Less But Still… Really?
In the meantime, in much older analytic philosophy, Frege has this whole framework for taking the surface words as having senses in a really useful way, and this whole approach to language is really obsessed with “intensional contexts where that-quoting occurs” (because reference seems to work differently inside vs outside a “that-quoted-context”). Consider...
The subfield where people talk about “intensional language contexts” is very tiny, but with enough googling you can find people saying stuff about it like this:
As another example of an intensional context, reflectica allows us to correctly distinguish between de re and de dicto meanings of a sentence, see the Supplement to [6]. For example, the sentence Leo believes that some number is prime can mean either
𝖡𝖾𝗅𝗂𝖾𝗏𝖾𝗌¯(𝖫𝖾𝗈¯,∃x[𝖭𝗎𝗆𝖻𝖾𝗋¯(x)&𝖯𝗋𝗂𝗆𝖾¯(x)])
or
∃x(𝖭𝗎𝗆𝖻𝖾𝗋¯(x)&𝖡𝖾𝗅𝗂𝖾𝗏𝖾𝗌¯[𝖫𝖾𝗈¯,𝖯𝗋𝗂𝗆𝖾¯(x)]).
Note that, since the symbol `𝖡𝖾𝗅𝗂𝖾𝗏𝖾𝗌¯’ is intensional in the second argument, the latter formula involves quantifying into an intensional context, which Quine thought is incoherent [7] (but reflectica allows to do such things coherently).
So in mere English words we might try to spell out a Fregean approach like this...
“You must pay me for the food I’m selling you.”
“It is (indicatively) true: I gave you food. Also please (imperatively): the sense of the phrase ‘you pay me’ should become true.”
I think that’s how Frege’s stuff might work if we stretched it quite far? But it is really really fuzzy. It starts to connect a little tiny bit to the threat and counter threat of “real social life among humans” but Kripke’s math seems somewhat newer and shinier and weirder.
Like… “reflectiva” is able to formally capture a way for the indicative mood to work in a safe and tidy domain like math despite the challenges of self reference and quoting and so on...
...but I have no idea whether or how reflectiva could bring nuance to questions, or commands, or laws, or stories-of-what-not-to-do, such that “all the real grammaticalized modes” could get any kind of non-broken treatment in reflectiva.
And in the meantime, in Spanish “poder” is the verb for “can” and cognate to modal auxiliary verbs like “could” (which rhymes with “would” and “should”) and poder is FULL of emotions and metaphysics!
Where are the metaphysics here? Where is the magic? Where is the drama? “Shouldness” causes confusion that none of these theories seem to me to explain!
II. It Is As If Each Real Natural Language Is Almost Anti-Epistemic And So Languages Collectively ARE Anti-Epistemic?
Like WTF, man… WTF.
And that is why my attempt, during covid, to find a simple practical easy Characteristica universalis for kids, failed.
“During covid” I got really interested in language, and was thinking of making a conlang.
It would be an intentional pidgin (and so very very simple in some sense) that was on the verge of creolizing but which would have small simple words with clear definitions that could be used to “ungramaticalize” everything that had been grammaticalized in some existing human language…
...this project to “lexicalize”-all-the-grammar(!) defeated me.
I want to ramble at length about my defeat! <3
The language or system I was trying to wrap my head around would be kind of like Ithkuil, except, like… hopefully actually usable by real humans?
But the rabbit-hole-problems here are rampant. There are so many ideas here. It is so easy to get bad data and be confused about it. Here is a story of being pleasantly confused over and over...
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
I. Digression Into A Search For A Periodic Table Of “Grammar”
I.A. Grammar Is Hard, Lets Just Be Moody As A Practice Run
I.A.1. Digression Into Frege’s Exploration Of ONLY The Indicative Mood
I.A.2. Commentary on Frege, Seeking Extensions To The Interogrative Moods
I.A.2.a. Seeking briefly to sketch better evidentiality markers in a hypothetical language (and maybe suggesting methods thereby)
I.A.2.a.i. Procedural commentary on evidentiality concomittment to the challenges of understanding the interogative mood.
I.B.1. Trying To Handle A Simple Case: Moods In Diving Handsigns
I.B.1.a Diving Handsigns Have Pragmatically Weird Mood (Because Avoiding Drowning Is The Most Important Thing) But They are Simple (Because It Is For Hobbyists With Shit In Their Mouth)
I.B.2. Trying To Find The Best Framework For Mood Leads To… Nenets?
I.B.2.a. But Nenets Is Big, And Time Was Short, And Kripke Is Always Dogging Me, And I’m A Pragmatist At Heart
I.B.2.a. Frege Dogs Me Less But Still… Really?
II. It Is As If Each Real Natural Language Is Almost Anti-Epistemic And So Languages Collectively ARE Anti-Epistemic?
...
I. Digression Into A Search For A Periodic Table Of “Grammar”
I feel like a lot of people eventually convergently aspire to what I wanted. Like they want a “Master list of tense, aspect, mood, and voice across languages?”
That reddit post, that I found while writing this, was written maybe a year after I tried to whip one of these up just for mood in a month or three of “work to distract me from the collapse of civilization during covid”… and failed!
((I mean… I probably did succeed at distracting myself from the collapse of civilization during covid, but I did NOT succeed at “inventing the omnilang semantic codepoint set”. No such codepoints are on my harddrive, so I’m pretty sure I failed. The overarching plan that I expected to take a REALLY long time was to have modular control of semantics, isolating grammars, and phonology all working orthogonally, so I could eventually generate an infinite family of highly regular conlangs at will, just from descriptions of how they should work.))
So a first and hopefully simplest thing I was planning on building, was a sort of periodic table of “mood”.
Just mood… I could do the rest later… and yet even this “small simplest thing” defeated me!
(Also note that the most centrally obvious overarching thing would be to do a TAME system with Tense, Aspect, Mood, and Evidentiality. I don’t think Voice is that complicated… Probably? But maybe that redditor knows something I don’t?)
I.A. Grammar Is Hard, Lets Just Be Moody As A Practice Run
Part of the problem I ran into with this smaller question is: “what the fuck even is a mood??”
Like in terms of its “total meaning” what even are these things? What is their beginning and ends? How are they bounded?
Like if we’re going to be able, as “analytic philosophers or language” to form a logically coherent theory of natural human language pragmatics and semantics that enables translation from any natural utterance by any human into and through a formally designed (not just a pile of matrices) way to translate that utterance into some sort of Characteristica Universalis… what does that look like?
In modern English grammar we basically only have two moods in our verb marking grammar: the imperative and the indicative (and maybe the interrogative mood, but that mostly just happens mostly in the word order)...
(...old European linguists seemed to have sometimes thought “real grammar” was just happening in the verbs, where you’d sometimes find them saying, of a wickedly complex language, that “it doesn’t even have grammar” because it didn’t have wickedly complex verb conjugation.)
And in modern English we also have the the modal auxiliary verbs that (depending on where you want to draw certain lines) include: can, could, may, might, must, shall, should, will, would, and ought!
Also sometimes there are some small phrases which do similar work but don’t operate grammatically the same way.
(According to Wikipedia-right-now Mandarin Chinese has a full proper modal auxiliary verb for “daring to do something”! Which is so cool! And I’m not gonna mention it again in this whole comment, because I’m telling a story about a failure, and “dare” isn’t part of the story! Except like: avoiding rabbit holes like these is key to making any progress, and yet if you don’t explore them all you probably will never get a comprehensive understanding, and that’s the overall tension that this sprawling comment is trying to illustrate.)
In modern English analytic philosophy we also invented “modal” logic which is about “possibility” and “necessity”. And this innovation in symbolic logic might capture successfully formally capture “can” and “must” (which are “modal auxiliary verbs)… but it doesn’t have almost anything to do with the interrogative mood. Right? I think?
In modern English, we have BOTH an actual grammatical imperative mood with verb-changes-and-everything, but we also have modal auxiliary verbs like “should” (and the archaic “may”).
Is the change in verb conjugation for imperative, right next to “should” and “may” pointless duplication… or not? Does it mean essentially the same thing to say “Sit down!” vs “You should sit down!” …or not?
Consider lots of sentences like “He can run”, “He could run”, “He may run”, etc.
But then notice that “He can running”, “He could running”, “He may running” all sound wrong (but “he can be running, “he could be running”, and “he may be running” restore the sound of real English).
This suggests that “-ing” and “should” are somewhat incompatible… but not 100%? When I hear “he should be running” it is a grammatical statement that can’t be true if “he” is known to the speaker to be running right now.
The speaker must not know for the sentence to work!
Our hypothetical shared English-parsing LAD subsystems which hypothetically generate the subjective sense of “what sounds right and wrong as speech” thinks that active present things are slightly structurally incompatible with whatever modal auxiliary verbs are doing, in general, with some kind of epistemic mediation!
But why LAD? Why?!?!
Wikipedia says of the modal verbs:
With “semantics” (on the next Wikipedia page) defined as:
So like… it kind seems like the existing philosophic and pedagogical frameworks here can barely wrap their head around “the pragmatics of semantics” or “the semantics of pragmatics” or “the referential content of an imperative sentence as a whole” or any of this sort of thing.
Maybe linguists and ESL teachers and polyglots have ALL given up on the “what does this mean and what’s going on in our heads” questions…
...but then the philosophers (to whom this challenge should naturally fall) don’t even have a good clean answer for THE ONE EASIEST MOOD!!! (At least not to my knowledge right now.)
I.A.1. Digression Into Frege’s Exploration Of ONLY The Indicative Mood
Frege attacked this stuff kinda from scratch (proximate to his invention of kinda the entire concept of symbolic logic in general) in a paper “Ueber Sinn und Bedeutung” which has spawned SO SO MANY people who start by explaining what Frege said, and then explaining other philosopher’s takes on it, and then often humbly sneaking in their own take within this large confusing conversation.
For example, consider Kevin C. Klement’s book, “Frege And The Logic Of Sense And Reference”.
Anyway, the point of bringing up Frege is that he had a sort of three layer system, where utterable sentences in the indicative mood had connotative and denotative layers and the denontative layers had two sublayers. (Connotation is thrown out to be treated later… and then never really returned to.)
Each part of speech (but also each sentence (which makes more sense given that sentence CAN BE a subphrase within a larger sentence)) could be analyzed for its denotation in term the two things (senses and references) from the title of the paper.
All speechstuff might have “reference” (what it points to in the extended external context that exists) and a “sense” (the conceptual machinery reliably evoked, in a shared way, in the minds of all capable interpreters of a sentence by each part of the speechstuff, such that this speechstuff could cause the mind to find the thing that was referred to).
“DOG” then has a reference to all the dogs and/or doglike things out there such such that the word “DOG” can be used to “de re refer” to what “DOG” obviously can be used to refer to “out there”.
Then, “DOG” might also have a sense of whatever internal conceptual machinery “DOG” evokes in a mind to be able to perform that linkage. In so maybe “DOG” also “de dicto refers” to this “sense of what dogs are in people’s minds”???
Then, roughly, Frege proposed that a sentence collects up all the senses in the individual words and mixes them together.
This OVERALL COMBINED “sense of the sentence” (a concept machine for finding stuff in reality) would be naturally related to the overall collection of all the senses of all of the parts of speech. And studying how the senses of words linked into the sense of the sentence was what “symbolic logic” was supposed to be a clean externalized theoretical mirror of.
Once we have a complete concept machine mentally loaded up as “the sense of the sentence” this concept machine could be used to examine the world (or the world model, or whatever) to see if there is a match.
The parts of speech have easy references. “DOG” extends to “the set of all the dogs out there” and “BROWN” extends to “all the brown things out there” and “BROWN DOG” is just the intersection of these sets. Easy peasy!
Then perhaps (given that we’re trying to push “sense” and “reference” as far as we can to keep the whole system parsimonious as a theory for how indicative sentences work) we could say “the ENTIRE sentence refers to Truth” (and, contrariwise, NO match between the world and the sense of the sentence means “the sentence refers to Falsehood”).
That is, to Frege, depending on how you ready him “all true sentences refer to the category of Truth itself”.
Aside from the fact that this is so galaxy-brained and abstract that it is probably a pile of bullshit… a separate problem arises in that… it is hard to directly say much here about “the imperative mood”!
Maybe it has something to say about the interrogative mood?
I.A.2. Commentary on Frege, Seeking Extensions To The Interogrative Moods
Maybe when you ask a question, pragmatically, it is just “the indicative mood but as a two player game instead of a one player game”?
Maybe uttering a sentence in the interrogative mood is a way for “player one” to offer “a sense” to “player two” without implying that they know how the sense refers (to Truth of Falsehood or whatever).
They might be sort of “cooperatively hoping for” player two to take “the de dicto reference to the sense of the utterance of player one” and check that sense (which player one “referred to”?) against player two’s own distinct world model (which would be valuable if player two has better mapped some parts of the actual world than player one has)?
If player two answers the question accurately, then the combined effect for both of them is kind of like what Frege suggests is occurring in a single lonely mind when that mind reads and understands the indicative form of “the same sentence” and decides that they are true based on comparing them to memory and so on. Maybe?
Except the first mind who hears an answer to a question still has sort of not grounded directly to the actual observables or their own memories or whatever. It isn’t literally mentally identical.
If player one “learned something” from hearing a question answered (and player one is human rather than a sapient AI), it might, neurologically, be wildly distinct from “learning something” by direct experience!
Now… there’s something to be said for this concern already being gramaticalized (at least in other languages) in the form of “evidentiality”, such that interrogative moods and evidential markers should “unify somehow”.
Hypothetically, evidential marking could show up as a sentence final particle, but I think in practice it almost always shows up as a marker on verbs.
And then, if we were coming at this from the perspective of AI, and having a stable and adequate language for talking to AI, a sad thing is that the evidentiality markers are almost always based on folk psychology, not on the real way that actual memories work in a neo-modern civilization running on top of neurologically baseline humans with access to the internet :-(
I.A.2.a. Seeking briefly to sketch better evidentiality markers in a hypothetical language (and maybe suggesting methods thereby)
I went to Wikipedia’s Memory Category and took all the articles that had a title in the from of “<adjective phrase> <noun>” where <noun> was “memory” or “memories”.
ONLY ONE was plural! And so I report that here as the “weird example”: Traumatic memories.
Hypothetically then, we could have a language where everyone was obliged to mark all main verbs as being based on “traumatic” vs “non-traumatic” memories?
((So far as I’m aware, there’s no language on earth that is obliged to mark whether a verb in a statement is backed by memories that are traumatic or not.))
Scanning over all the Wikipedia articles I can find here (that we might hypothetically want to mark as an important distinction) in verbs and/or sentences, the adjectives that can modify a “memory” article are (alphabetically): Adaptive, Associative, Autobiographical, Childhood, Collective, Context-dependent, Cultural, Destination, Echoic, Eidetic, Episodic, Episodic-like, Exosomatic, Explicit, External, Eyewitness, Eyewitness (child), Flashbulb, Folk, Genetic. Haptic, Iconic, Implicit, Incidental, Institutional, Intermediate-term, Involuntary, Long-term, Meta, Mood-dependent, Muscle, Music-evoked autobiographical, Music-related, National, Olfactory, Organic, Overgeneral autobiographical, Personal-event, Plant, Prenatal, Procedural, Prospective, Recognition, Reconstructive, Retrospective, Semantic, Sensory, Short-term, Sparse distributed, Spatial, Time-based prospective, Transactive, and Transsaccadic.
In the above sentence, I said roughly
The main verb of that sentence is technically “are” but “modify” is also salient, and already was sorta-conjugated into the “can-modify” form.
Hypothetically (if speaking a language where evidentiality must be marked, and imagining marking it with all the features that could work differently in various forms of memory) I could mark the entire sentence I just uttered in terms of my evidence for the sentence itself!
I believe that sentence itself was probably:
+ Institutional (via “Wikipedia”) and
+ Context Dependent (I’ll forget it after reading and processing wikipedia falls out of my working memory) and
+ Cultural (based on the culture of english-speaking wikipedians) and
+ Exosomatic (I couldn’t have spoken the sentence aloud with my mouth without intense efforts of memorization, but I could easily compose the sentence in writing with a text editor), and
+ Explicit (in words, not not-in-words), and
+ Folk (because wikipedians are just random people, not Experts), and
+ Meta (because in filtering the wikipedia articles down to that list I was comparing ways I have of memorizing to claims about how memory works), and
+ National (if you think of the entire Anglosphere as being a sort of nation separated by many state boundaries, so that 25-year-old Canadians and Australians and Germans-who-learned English young can’t ever all have the same Prime Minister without deeply restructuring various States, but are still “born together” in some tribal sense, and they all can reason and contribute to the same English language wikipedia), and maybe
+ Procedural (in that I used procedures to manipulate the list of kinds of memories by hand, and if I made procedural errors in composing it (like accidentally deleting a word and not noticing) then I might kinda have lied-by-accident due to my hands “doing data manipulation” wrongly), and definitely
+ Reconstructive (from many many inputs and my own work), and
+ Semantic (because words and means are pretty central here).
Imagine someone tried to go through an essay that they had written in the past and do a best-effort mark-up of ALL of the verbs with ALL of these, and then look for correlations?
Like I bet I bet “Procedural” and “Reconstructive” and “Semantic” go together a lot?
(And maybe that is close to one or more of the standard Inferential evidential markers?)
Likewise “Cultural” and “National” and “Institutional” and “Folk” also might go together a lot?
They they link up somewhat nicely with a standard evidentiality marker that often shows up which is “Reportative”!
So here is the sentence again, re-written, with some coherent evidential and modal tags attached, that is trying to simply and directly speak to the challenges:
One or more reportatives sorta convergently shows up in many language that have obligate evidential marking.
The thing I really want here is to indicate that “I’m mentally outsourcing a reconciliation of kinds of memories and kinds of evidential markers to the internet institution of Wikipedia via elaborate procedures”.
Sometimes, some languages require that what not say “reportatively” but specifically drill down to distinguish between “Quotative” (where the speaker heard from someone who saw it and is being careful with attribution) vs “Hearsay” (which is what the listener of a Quotative or a Hearsay evidential claim should probably use when they relate the same fact again because now they are offering hearsay (at least if you think of each conversation as a court and each indicative utterance in a conversation as testimony in that court)).
Since Wikipedia does not allow original research, it is essentially ALL hearsay, I think? Maybe? And so maybe it’d be better to claim:
For all I know (this is not an area of expertise for me at all) there could be a lot of other “subtypes of reportative evidential markers” in real existing human languages so that some language out there could say this easily???
I’m not sure if I should keep the original “can” or be happy about this final version’s use of “might”.
Also, “validly” snuck in there, and I’m not sure if I mean “scientificallyValidly” (tracking the scientific concept of validity) or “morallyValidly” (in the sense that I “might not be writing pure bullshit and so I might not deserve moral sanction”)?
Dear god. What even is this comment! Why!? Why is it so hard?!
Where were we again?
I.A.2.a.i. Procedural commentary on evidentiality concomittment to the challenges of understanding the interogative mood.
Ahoy there John and David!
I’m not trying to write an essay (exactly), I’m writing a comment responding to you! <3
I think I don’t trust language to make “adequate” sense. Also, I don’t trust humans to “adequately” understand language. I don’t trust common sense utterances to “adequately” capture anything in a clean and good and tolerably-final way.
The OP seems to say “yeah, this language stuff is safe to rely on to be basically complete” and I think I’m trying to say “no! that’s not true! that’s impossible!” because language is a mess. Everywhere you look it is wildly half-assed, and vast, and hard to even talk about, and hard to give examples of, and combintorially interacting with its own parts.
The digression just now into evidentiality was NOT something I worked on back in 2020, but it is illustrative of the sort of rabbit holes that one finds almost literally everywhere one looks, when working on “analytic meta linguistics” (or whatever these efforts could properly be called).
Remember when I said this at the outset?
The reason I failed to create anything like a periodic table of grammar for a pidgin style conlang is because there are so many nooks and crannies! …and they ALL SEEM TO INTERACT!
Maybe if I lived to be 200 years old, I could spend 100 of those years in a library, designing a language for children to really learn to speak as “a second toy language” that put them upstream of everything in every language? Maybe?
However, if I could live to 200 and spend 100 years on this, then probably so could all the other humans, and then… then languages would take until you were 30 to even speak properly, I suspect, and it would just loop around to not being possible for me again even despite living to 200?
I.B.1. Trying To Handle A Simple Case: Moods In Diving Handsigns
When I was working on this, I was sorta aiming to get something VERY SMALL at first because that’s often the right way to make progress in software. Get test cases working inside of a framework.
So, it seemed reasonable to find “a REAL language” that people really need and use and so on, but something LESS than the full breadth of everything one can generally find being spoken in a tiny village on some island near Papua New Guinea?
So I went looking into scuba hand signs with the hope of translating a tiny and stupidly simple language and just successfully send THAT to some kind of Characteristia Universalis prototype to handle the “semantics of the pragmatics of modal operators”.
The goal wasn’t to handle tense, aspect, evidentiality, voice, etc in general. I suspect that diving handsigns don’t even have any of that!
But it would maybe be some progress to be able to translate TOY languages into a prototype of an ultimate natural meta-language.
I.B.1.a Diving Handsigns Have Pragmatically Weird Mood (Because Avoiding Drowning Is The Most Important Thing) But They are Simple (Because It Is For Hobbyists With Shit In Their Mouth)
So the central juicy challenge was that in diving manuals, a lot of times their hand signs are implicitly in the imperative mood.
The dive leader’s orders are strong, and mostly commands, by default.
The dive followers mostly give suggestions (unless they relate to safety, in which case they aren’t supposed to use them except for really reals, because even if they use them wrongly, the dive leader has to end the dive if there’s a chance of a risk of drowning based on what was probably communicated).
Then, in this linguistic situation, it turns out they just really pragmatically need stuff like this “question mark” handsign which marks the following or preceding handsign (or two) as having been in the interrogative mood:
And so I felt like I HAD to be able to translate the interrogative and imperative moods “cleanly” into something cleanly formal, even just for this “real toy language”.
If I was going to match Frege’s successes in a way that is impressive enough to justify happening in late 2020 (222 years after the 1892 publication of “Sense and Reference”), then… well… maybe I could use this to add one or two signs to “diving sign language” and actually generate technology from my research, as a proof that the research wasn’t just a bunch of bullshit!
(Surely there has been progress here in philosophy in two centuries… right?!)
((As a fun pragmatic side note, there’s a kind of interpretation here of this diving handsign where “it looks like a question mark” but also its kind of interesting how the index finger is “for pointing” and that pointing symbol is “broken or crooked” so even an alien might be able to understand that as “I can’t point, but want to be able to point”?!? Is “broken indexicality” the heart of the interrogative mood somehow? If we wish to RETVRN TO NOVA ZEMBLA must we eschew this entire mood maybe??))
Like… the the imperative and interrogative moods are the default moods for a lot of diving handsigns!
You can’t just ignore this and only think about the indicative mood all the time, like it was still the late 1800s… right? <3
So then… well… what about “the universal overarching framework” for this?
I.B.2. Trying To Find The Best Framework For Mood Leads To… Nenets?
So I paused without any concrete results on the diving stuff (because making Anki decks for that and trying it in a swimming pool would take forever and not give me a useful output) to think about where it was headed.
And now I wanted to know “what are all the Real Moods?”
And a hard thing here is (1) English doesn’t have that many in its verbs and (2) linguists often only count the ones that show up in verb conjugation as “real” (for counting purposes), and (3) there’s a terrible terrible problem in getting a MECE list of The Full List Of Real Moods from “all the languages”.
Point three is non-obvious. The issue is, from language to language, they might lump and split the whole space of possible moods to mark differently so that one language might use “the mood the linguist decided to call The Irrealis Mood” only for telling stories with magic in them (but also they are animists and think the world is full of magic), and another language might use something a linguist calls “irrealis” for that AND ALSO other stuff like basic if/then logic!
So… I was thinking that maybe the thing to do would be to find the SINGLE language that, to the speakers of that language and linguists studying them, had the most DISTINCT moods with MECE marking.
This language turns out to be: Nenets. It has (I think) ~16 moods, marked inside the verb conjugation like it has been allowed to simmer and get super weird and barely understandable to outsiders for >1000 years, and marking mood is obligatory! <3
One can find academic reports on Nenets grammar like this:
So… so I think they have a “once upon a time” mood? Or maybe it is like how technical projects often make commitments at the beginning like “we’re are only going to use technology X” and then this is arguably a mistake, and yet arguably everyone has to live with it forever, and so you tell the story about how “we decided to only, in the future, use technology X”… and that would be marked as “it was necessary in the deep past to use technology X going forward” with this “narrative mood” thingy that Nenets reportedly has? So you might just say something like “we narratively-use technology X” in that situation?
Maybe?
I.B.2.a. But Nenets Is Big, And Time Was Short, And Kripke Is Always Dogging Me, And I’m A Pragmatist At Heart
And NONE OF THIS got at what I actually think is often going on when, like at an animal level, where “I hereby allow you to eat” has a deep practical meaning!
The PDF version of Irina Nikolaeva’s “A Grammar of Tundras Nenets” is 528 pages, but only pages 85 to 105 are directly about mood. Maybe it should be slogged through? (I tried slogging, and the slogging lead past so many rabbit holes!)
Like, I think maybe “allowing someone to eat” could be done by marking “eat” with the Jussive Mood (that Nenets has) and then if we’re trying to unpack that into some kind of animalistic description of all of what is kinda going on the phrase “you jussive-eat” might mean something like:
“I will not sanction you with my socially recognized greater power if you try to eat, despite how I normally would sanction you, and so, game theoretically, it would be in your natural interest to eat like everyone usually wants to eat (since the world is Malthusian by default) but would normally be restrained from eating by fear of social sanction (since food sharing is a core loop in social mammals and eating in front of others without sharing will make enemies and disrupt the harmony of the group and so on), but it would be wise of you to do so urgently in this possibly short period of special dispensation, from me, who is the recognized controller of rightful and morally tolerated access to the precious resource that is food”.
Now we could ask, is my make-believe Nenets phrase “you jussive-eat” similar to English “you should eat” or “you may eat” or “you can eat” or none-of-these-and-something-else or what?
Maybe English would really need something very complexly marked with status and pomp to really communicate it properly like “I allow you to eat, hereby, with this speech act”?
Or maybe I still don’t have a good grasp on the underlying mood stuff and am fundamentally misunderstanding Nenets and this mood? It could be!
But then, also, compare my giant paragraph full of claims about status and hunger and predictable patterns of sanction with Kripke’s modal logic which is full of clever representations of “necessity” and “possibility” in a way that he is often argued to have grounded in possible worlds.
“You must pay me for the food I’m selling you.”
“There exist no possible worlds where it is possible for you to not pay me for the food I’m selling you.”
The above are NOT the SAME! At all!
But maybe that’s the strawman sketch… but every time I try to drop into the symbolic logic literature around Kripke I come out of it feeling like they are entirely missing the idea of like… orders and questions and statements, and how orders and questions and statements are different from each other and really important to what people use modals in language and practically unmentioned by the logicians :-(
I.B.2.b. Frege Dogs Me Less But Still… Really?
In the meantime, in much older analytic philosophy, Frege has this whole framework for taking the surface words as having senses in a really useful way, and this whole approach to language is really obsessed with “intensional contexts where that-quoting occurs” (because reference seems to work differently inside vs outside a “that-quoted-context”). Consider...
The subfield where people talk about “intensional language contexts” is very tiny, but with enough googling you can find people saying stuff about it like this:
Sauce is: Mikhail Patrakeev’s “Outline of a Self-Reflecting Theory”
((Oh yeah. Quine worked on this stuff too! <3))
So in mere English words we might try to spell out a Fregean approach like this...
“You must pay me for the food I’m selling you.”
“It is (indicatively) true: I gave you food. Also please (imperatively): the sense of the phrase ‘you pay me’ should become true.”
I think that’s how Frege’s stuff might work if we stretched it quite far? But it is really really fuzzy. It starts to connect a little tiny bit to the threat and counter threat of “real social life among humans” but Kripke’s math seems somewhat newer and shinier and weirder.
Like… “reflectiva” is able to formally capture a way for the indicative mood to work in a safe and tidy domain like math despite the challenges of self reference and quoting and so on...
...but I have no idea whether or how reflectiva could bring nuance to questions, or commands, or laws, or stories-of-what-not-to-do, such that “all the real grammaticalized modes” could get any kind of non-broken treatment in reflectiva.
And in the meantime, in Spanish “poder” is the verb for “can” and cognate to modal auxiliary verbs like “could” (which rhymes with “would” and “should”) and poder is FULL of emotions and metaphysics!
Where are the metaphysics here? Where is the magic? Where is the drama? “Shouldness” causes confusion that none of these theories seem to me to explain!
II. It Is As If Each Real Natural Language Is Almost Anti-Epistemic And So Languages Collectively ARE Anti-Epistemic?
Like WTF, man… WTF.
And that is why my attempt, during covid, to find a simple practical easy Characteristica universalis for kids, failed.
Toki pona is pretty cool, though <3