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jei clani (was: RE: Re: poi'i, se/te/ve ka



xod:
> On Tue, 17 Dec 2002, John Cowan wrote:
> 
> > Invent Yourself scripsit:
> >
> > > 1. Because the car is blue 90% of the time, as it's constantly flickering
> > > colors?
> > >
> > > 2. Because we've never seen the car but we're 90% certain it's blue?
> > >
> > > 3. Because 90% of its surface is blue?
> > >
> > > 4. Because its color is objectively 90% blue?
> > >
> > > 5.Because 90% of survey respondents called it blue?
> >
> > Any or all of these might be evidence for the truthishness of the claim 
> > When I said "certainty is neither here nor there," I was talking about
> > subjective certainty (= certitude).  Objective uncertainty is a common
> > application of fuzzy logic: an OCR device may decide that a blob of ink
> > is (90%) an instance of "t", and is not (10%) an instance of "T" 
> > Some predicates, like "tall", are inherently fuzzy 
> 
> It seems to me that this allows my original usage: that "jei by. clani" is
> related to B's height 

I think you and me are on the same side on this one, but two
people of different heights can yield the same value for jei X clani.
To gauge the value of both ni clani and jei clani, you can measure
the height, but different values of ni can correspond to the same
value of jei.

--And.