Om (or Aum) is the sound of a sacred spiritual symbol in Indian religions, mainly in Hinduism, wherein it signifies the essence of the Ultimate Reality (parabrahman) which is consciousness (paramatman). — Wikipedia
It looks as though description is synonymous with definition. The objective of definitions being to condense information, the description, in one word. It's very much like the concept of radix in math in which you pack quantities in different powers of a given radix. See packing problems. — TheMadFool
It looks as though description is synonymous with definition. The objective of definitions being to condense information, the description, in one word. It's very much like the concept of radix in math in which you pack quantities in different powers of a given radix. See packing problems.
— TheMadFool
But at no point in history did anyone say "let's condense information into a single world and then we'll have a definition". I think you're thinking about it backwards. Definitions of words come after their use in language. Definition is academic; use is public and first. — Noble Dust
Descriptive power, it seems, requires only that a language have words that capture very general aspects of life. For example, with the words, "that", "feeling", "you", "get", "when", "lose", "a", "million", "dollars", you can describe sorrow like so:
Sorrow (description): That feeling you get when you lose a million dollars.
It looks as though description is synonymous with definition. The objective of definitions being to condense information, the description, in one word. It's very much like the concept of radix in math in which you pack quantities in different powers of a given radix. See packing problems. — TheMadFool
people have a word like computer back in the old days — TheMadFool
Nice Tintin avatar, btw. And I can't help but ask... "Arcturus" wouldn't be a reference to "A Voyage To Arcturus" by David Lindsay, right?
2mReply — Noble Dust
Incorrect — Noble Dust
Nice Tintin avatar, btw. And I can't help but ask... "Arcturus" wouldn't be a reference to "A Voyage To Arcturus" by David Lindsay, right? — Noble Dust
In my mind it's light grey with a non-obvious hue of blue that perhaps suggest yellow and green might have recently been present. — Cheshire
I pretty much agree; as I said int he linked thread, "I love you more than words can say" doesn't say how much I love you, it shows it. — Banno
I don't know the etymology of "computer" by heart, but I'd assume it has to do with "one that computes". But technological words are potentially the exception to the rule, although I think they're not unlike naming planets after Greek or Roman gods; established concepts are consciously used to define a new technological or scientific concept - but that's the exception to the rule of how language functions, although maybe increasingly that will change with the evolution of technology. My point is that, barring everything I just mentioned, language functions organically in that definitions arise naturally over time and are substantiated through common use, not through any premeditated design — Noble Dust
people have a word like computer back in the old days
— TheMadFool
What are the days? Before the computers there were computers. — VincePee
I'll admit I'm not sure what you're trying to convey, but how would you apply it to this description? ->
'Toward early morning he woke, sat up quickly and looked about him. It was still dark and the fire had long since died, still dark and quiet with that silence that seems to be of itself listening, an astral quiet where planets collide soundlessly, beyond the auricular dimension altogether. He listened. Above the black ranks of trees the mid-summer sky arched cloudless and coldly starred. He lay back and stared at it and after a while he slept." — Arcturus
All that I'm saying is what happens if I take a modern text - a novel, a scientific treatise, a poem, etc. - and take it back 2,000 years into the past and ask the people then to translate it: plane = iron bird? :chin: — TheMadFool
contradicting yourself
— TheMadFool
? The word computer has more than 1 meaning. — VincePee
Woah. We may have to have a chat about that. Cheers to Herge and Lindsay. :party: — Noble Dust
You mean to say that the word "computer" existed in Babylonian/Egyptian times? I don't think so. — TheMadFool
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