Basic Words
A MINIMAL SET OF WORDS THAT GENERATES the WORLD

Anil MITRA, © 2001 - June 2002

CONTENTS

The concept 1

Keys 1

Word, concept and object 1

Metaphysics 1

Word  1

Concept and object 1

The implementation  1

Topics and Words to be Explained  1

Metaphysics 1

Language and Metaphysics 1

Language and Logic 2

Proposition  2

Propositional Attitudes 2

Language  2

Elements of Language  2

Letter 2

Alphabet 2

Syllabary  2

Phoneme  2

Syllable  2

Word  2

Phrase  2

Sentence  2

Clause  2

Paragraph  2

Chapter 2

Book  2

Text 2

Grammar and Syntax 2

Grammar 2

Syntax 2

Alphabet, numerals, signs. 2

Sentences - parts of speech  3

Adjective  3

Adverb  3

Case  3

Conjugation  3

Conjunction  3

Dangling  3

Inflected forms 3

Interjection  3

Noun  3

Pronoun  3

Preposition  3

Verb  3

Semantics 3

Linguistics glossary  3

Sources  3

Plan  3

A Set of Basic Words  3

 


The concept

A minimal set of words and other language elements to express local and universal ontologies; and the action of an individual being living luxuriantly in its own domain and in knowing and becoming ultimate being.

Keys

Word, concept and object

It is not meaningful to consider object, concept and word separately – here, concept includes percept and, naturally, feeling… and “object” is used in a general way to include process, quality, relationship and function. Concept is the way in which object is known – on a representational view. Or, on a presentational view, concept is object. Therefore, on the latter view it is not meaningful to consider concept and world separately. In some views word and object or word and concept are identical or equivalent; these include analytic philosophy and the concept of “mantra.” In any case, from onomatopoeia and psychology, word and object or word and concept are closely bound in human mind.

Metaphysics

The world is not understood merely as a collection of objects; it is a whole. And the holism derives not only interaction but also from the mutuality of existence. Therefore, the meaning of a concept cannot be given without a metaphysics of a system of objects. But there is no given metaphysics that is generally agreed upon [except, see, metaphysics of presence in Metaphysics] and therefore there is an empirical element to meaning. We knew this anyway, but the empirical element in question here is essential.

Word

Origins in communication, see Kinds of Knowledge. Sign and symbol. Word and pictograph

Theory: language, syntax, semantics, linguistics, semiotics.

Generators: iconic elements, syllable and syllabary, alphabet

Compound word generators: word, word stem, prefix, infix, suffix

Generators: varieties of form based in metaphysics: declension, inflected forms

Concept and object

Object, relationship, process and the generalization to being, meaning, action

Quality – property – and number

Element and combination

Object: kind of object and specific object [noun and name]

The implementation

Everyday language is the base; then consider a metaphysics - what are the categories required to depict and describe that metaphysics - rendered in language. With regard to foundations - 1. Metaphysics, 2. Metaphysics )r( language or directly )r( language. Formalization, completeness and consistency, other meta-issues. Is there a need for depiction?

Topics and Words to be Explained

Metaphysics

Local metaphysics - intrinsic being

Universal metaphysics - Being, Meaning, and Action

Language and Metaphysics

There is an essential connection between language and metaphysics.

"Language is thoroughly indeterminate, by reason of the fact that every occurrence presupposes some systematic type of environment." "A precise language must await a completed metaphysical knowledge." The words of Alfred North Whitehead, Process and Reality, 1929 express the connection between metaphysics and language and an indeterminacy in language. Any essential incompleteness in metaphysics represents a further limit to the determinacy of language.

What is metaphysics? It is knowledge of the world as world. It includes the remote but also what is so common as to remain unnoticed - seen but unrecognized; it infuses each moment, each place, each life. It is omni-present in an unquestioning being in the world.

When we consider the most present and most basic elements of life - waking up in the morning, love, war, idyllic peace, a moment, an intention, the sum of a life we find, on a simple analysis that there are objects, relationships, action which includes change.

Language is a way to express these possibilities. Thus being-relationship-action leads to nouns, verbs and so on. It is easy to give explanation to other parts of speech and language elements.

However, it is not that simple. Is being-relation-action an adequate expression of the metaphysical possibilities and is language as conceived in its descriptive and prescriptive aspects adequate to any given metaphysical expression? And is there any need for language to completely cover metaphysical possibility? If knowledge of the world in its details and general character is in evolution, is not some flexibility in language, some under-specification a good thing?

Metaphysics is never quite right or complete. What is the "being of entities," "What is the nature of being," and "What is the nature of the question on the nature of being?" That is the spirit of Heidegger - the last question is mine. Even if we hold with Wittgenstein that it is all visible and that is all that needs to be made clear - the only thing to be explained is that there is no explanation or need for explanation, then that process in a state of incompletion.

Because of common context there may be seen to be some universality in description, in discussion and in education - and that can benefit communication in the common realm but also limit exploration beyond that realm. Before grammar the question does not arise.

Thus the following is seen to be true. Language is an open model for metaphysics; it is not exact and it allows for experiment and tinkering - this before syntax and its concretization, e.g., in the outline or details of the being-relationship-action model. Language continues to become refined in that process even though there is, naturally, a plateau that is common to all languages corresponding somewhat to a common stage of human being and action.

There is almost no point to a merely empirical study of language - but is there such a thing as a merely empirical study? We may think that we are doing an empirical study but that is only superficial.

Language and Logic

Varieties of linguistic expression: declarative or assertive, directive, commissive, expressive, declarative (two-way fit); the related mental attitudes; origin; organic foundation and hierarchy.

Generating knowledge

Semiotic

The sentence, the proposition, the unit of meaning and use and their philosophy

Proposition

Common definitions of the proposition are given in Kinds of Knowledge - a proposition is the primary bearer of truth; the meaning of a declarative sentence or, alternatively, a declarative sentence. A canonical form for the proposition is the subject-predicate form; this may be too limiting.

Propositional Attitudes

Propositional attitudes are generalizations from propositions in more than one way. First: an attitude need not count as knowledge as, say, in justified true belief; rather the propositional attitude may be one of belief, intrinsic knowledge state, action-base, intrinsic truth state and so on. Second, the form need not be that of the declarative sentence or even of proposition; it may be a visual picture of how the world is - and that may entail a basis for action, an intrinsic knowledge state... What do I mean intrinsic knowledge state? In everyday action we feel, without any necessary further reflection or analysis, without question a certain way about our pictures or propositions about the world; in day to day communication and action, for all practical purposes there is sometimes that unreflective intrinsic feeling "this is knowledge" - that is the intrinsic knowledge state. Further an attitude need have no direction of fit such as word to world and so on.

Language

Signs, symbols and proto-language

Elements of Language

Phoneme, syllable, word, phrase, clause - simple, complex and compound, sentence, paragraph, stanza, verse, chapter, text; presentational form

Varieties of speech act - and types of sentence

Letter

A symbol representing a speech sound and constituting a unit of an alphabet

Alphabet

Set of symbols or characters that represent the sounds of a language. Each character in an alphabet usually represents a simple vowel, a diphthong, or a consonant. "Alphabet" sometimes includes the concept of syllabaries.

Syllabary

A set of written symbols that represent the syllables of the words of a language... Writing systems that use syllabaries at least in part include Japanese, Cherokee, ancient Cretan scripts (linear A and linear B), and Indic and cuneiform systems.

Phoneme

Smallest unit of speech distinguishing one word from another, e.g. the sound f distinguishes "fat" from "pat" and "bat". A phoneme may have more than one variant sound, called an allophone that has no significance.

Syllable

A segment of speech that consists of a vowel, with or without one or more accompanying consonant sounds immediately preceding or following--for example, a, I, out, too, cap, snap, check. Any more precise definition of the syllable in phonetics and phonology a matter of debate

Word

A speech sound or series of speech sounds that symbolizes and communicates a meaning without being divisible into smaller units capable of independent use; or the entire set of linguistic forms produced by combining a single base with various inflectional elements without change in the part of speech elements.

Phrase

A word or group of words forming a syntactic constituent with a single grammatical function e.g. an adverbial phrase.

Sentence

A word, clause, or phrase or a group of clauses or phrases forming a syntactic unit which expresses an assertion, a question, a command, a wish, an exclamation, or the performance of an action, that in writing usually begins with a capital letter and concludes with appropriate end punctuation, and that in speaking is distinguished by characteristic patterns of stress, pitch, and pauses.

Clause

A group of words containing a subject and predicate and functioning as a member of a complex or compound sentence

Paragraph

A subdivision of a written composition that consists of one or more sentences, deals with one point or gives the words of one speaker.

Chapter

A main division of a book

Book

A treatise or literary work a major division of a treatise or literary work

Text

Something written or spoken considered as an object to be examined, explicated, or deconstructed.

Grammar and Syntax

Grammar

Sentence construction, the way sentences are constructed; the rules of sentence construction

Generative grammar: a set of rules whose output is all and only the permissible sentences of a language

Prescriptive grammar: exposition of rules based on correct or incorrect usage

A general meaning for grammar: the elements of any science, art, or subject

Wittgenstein's use:

Syntax

The first meaning of grammar, above

The wffs [well formed formulas] of a logical system, study of the same; the rules that generate such a system

Alphabet, numerals, signs.

Period

Comma

Question mark

Interjection mark

Colon

Semi-colon

End marks: paragraph, chapter, text...

Sentences - parts of speech

Adjective

Describing - nice day, best student

Delimiting - other years, some people

Quantifying - one dog, all things, some fruit

Adjectival - functioning as or forming an adjective phrase, clause

Adverb

Adverbial

Case

Nominative or subjective - indicating the subject of a finite verb

Objective - indicating the object of a transitive verb or possession

Possessive - indicating possession, ownership, origin

Ablative - indicating the starting point of an action

Accusative - indicating the direct object of a verb or certain prepositions

Conjugation

Conjunction

A small number of words - connectors between words, phrases, clauses or sentences. Examples: and, but, because, unless

Dangling

To occur in a sentence without a normally [expected] syntactic relation to the rest of the sentence, e.g., the word turning in "Turning the bend the mountain appeared." is dangling.

Inflected forms

Nouns - plural

Verbs - past tense

Adjectives: comparative, superlative

Interjection

Words typically used in grammatical isolation to express feeling, emotion: Ouch! Oh! Hey! Ugh!

Noun

Nouns function as the subject or object in a construction - typically things [persons, places, animals...], states, qualities e.g. darkness

Proper, common

Mass, countable

Name, person, gender, number

Gerund

Gerund n [LL gerundium, fr. L gerundus, gerundive of gerere to bear, carry on] (1513) 1: a verbal noun in Latin that expresses generalized or uncompleted action 2: any of several linguistic forms analogous to the Latin gerund in languages other than Latin; esp: the English verbal noun in -ing that has the function of a substantive and at the same time shows the verbal features of tense, voice, and capacity to take adverbial qualifiers and to govern objects

Complex gerundive...

Pronoun

A pronoun is one of a small group of words "used as replacements or substitutes for nouns or noun phrases mentioned in or understood from the context and having very general reference". Examples: I, you, he, she, them, this, who, what, it...

He - nominative or subjective

His - possessive

Him - subjective

Preposition

Prepositions are typically used before nouns, pronouns or other substantives to form phrases with adverbial, nominal or adjectival function

Verb

The main element of a predicate, typically expressing action, state, or a relation between two things, formally distinguished as being inflected for tense, aspect, voice, mood or agreement with the subject or object

Finite verb, transitive / intransitive verbs

Infinitive

Infinitive n (1530): a verb form normally identical in English with the first person singular that performs some functions of a noun and at the same time displays some characteristics of a verb and that is used with to (as in "I asked him to go") except with auxiliary and various other verbs (as in "no one saw him leave")

Split infinitive n (1897): an infinitive with to having a modifier between the to and the verbal (as in "to really start")

Usage The split infinitive was discovered and named in the 19th century. 19th century writers seem to have made greater use of this construction than earlier writers; the frequency of occurrence attracted the disapproving attention of grammarians, many of whom thought it to be a modern corruption. The construction had in fact been in occasional use since the 14th century; only its frequency had changed. Even though there has never been a rational basis for objecting to the split infinitive, the subject has become a fixture of folk belief about grammar. You can hardly publish a sentence containing one without hearing about it from somebody. Modern commentators know the split infinitive is not a vice, but they are loath to drop such a popular subject. They usu. say it's all right to split an infinitive in the interest of clarity. Since clarity is the usual reason for splitting, this advice means merely that you can split them whenever you need to.

Participle

Participle n [ME, fr. MF, modif. of L participium, fr. particip-, particeps] (14c): a word having the characteristics of both verb and adjective; esp: an English verbal form that has the function of an adjective and at the same time shows such verbal features as tense and voice and capacity to take an object

Perfect participle n (1862): past participle [a participle that typically expresses completed action, that is traditionally one of the principal parts of the verb, and that is traditionally used in English in the formation of perfect tenses in the active voice and of all tenses in the passive voice]

Present participle n (1864): a participle that typically expresses present action in relation to the time expressed by the finite verb in its clause and that in English is formed with the suffix -ing and is used in the formation of the progressive tenses

Past participle n (1798): a participle that typically expresses completed action, that is traditionally one of the principal parts of the verb, and that is traditionally used in English in the formation of perfect tenses in the active voice and of all tenses in the passive voice

Semantics

Figures of speech: metaphor, simile, hyperbole

Linguistics glossary

Sources

BE and sources for metaphysics; philosophy of language and linguistics; epistemology and logic.

Plan

Find sources / contacts; review and work through concept )r( implementation)r( topics)r( sources.

A Set of Basic Words

This is developed in interaction with the above considerations, especially in ongoing interaction with the empirical level - use and the theoretical level - metaphysics.