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Jordan: > On Mon, Dec 23, 2002 at 02:20:37PM +1100, Nick Nicholas wrote: > > Jordan, on whether a collective is truly {piroloi} or not, I'm > > deferring to Jorge and And, since they had raised the > > counterarguments. But one of your quiz responses (which I will go > > through) has me in anguish: > > They're saying no? Or are they saying yes because they think "loi" > means collective anyway? By my best understanding of lojbanmass (i.e. by taking it as defined by being expressed by loi/lei and being described in CLL), I think that the piro makes no difference and that (piro)loi can refer to a collective but needn't. To cut a long story short, sometimes loi/lei are used with apparently Collective meaning, and sometimes they are used with Substance meaning, and sometimes they are used with the meaning Substance-derived-from- Collective (as if like English "There was apple-threesome in the bowl"). Hence I conclude that lojbanmass covers all these meanings. Or perhaps it has just the meaning Substance-derived-from-Collective-of-su'opa- members. (I also conclude that if my understanding is correct, lojbanmass is not broken; it is just very wacky. As long as you allow it to be counterintuitive, I think it is possible to work out a coherent story for it.) > Can someone please define this "collective" stuff? The output of a collectivizer has discrete members -- it refers to a collection of discrete things. The collection itself is a single thing, it has emergent properties, and it inherits properties from its members on a case-by-case basis, depending on the members and properties in question. --And.