Re: OT: Tinkering versus creativity
From: | Sally Caves <scaves@...> |
Date: | Tuesday, June 27, 2006, 21:14 |
Yes... for example, AllNoun preceded Sylvia's Kelen. So did a variety of
language experiments--Ray's filled me in there. Sylvia may not have known
about these, but it was still in osmosis, so to speak, in that some
inventors have tried to break some kind of universal about language. I've
even thought of a language that did away with nouns and was all verbs and
adjectives. I'm sure I'm not original. Musical language? Lots of people,
including myself, thought we'd come up with something original (wow! a
language based on musical staves!) only to find that Francis Godwin had
invented Lunarian in _The Man in the Moone_ (1668), with a language based on
musical staves.
So I suppose, if you factor in the "ignorance" element, all of us who came
up with the idea of inventing a personal language prior to our having heard
of any other such creators including Tolkien are being "creative." But I
tend to agree with David and Mark and others on this subject: it's all
tinkering with a few explosions here and there, but you can't separate the
explosions from the tinkering. What would be the point? We live and create
in a vast continuum of human life and invention. Isn't it strange how
suddenly a bunch of people will start musing about a certain "new" idea
independently of one another?
Sally
----- Original Message -----
From: "Mark Reed" <markjreed@...>
To: <CONLANG@...>
Sent: Tuesday, June 27, 2006 2:28 PM
Subject: Re: OT: Tinkering versus creativity
> You can try all you want to do something entirely novel in your
> conlang, but chances are you will fail. Things only appear novel when
> you're ignorant of their antecedents. There's nothing *wholly* new
> under the sun, and *all* creative endeavors are, at some level, "just"
> tinkering with known elements. The distinction can only be made in
> ignorance and is imo worthless.
>
> On 6/27/06, Sai Emrys <sai@...> wrote:
>> On 6/26/06, Sally Caves <scaves@...> wrote:
>> > I'm also slightly annoyed by his demand that we ask "what evidence it
>> would
>> > take to prove our beliefs wrong." I come from a school of thought that
>> > prefers the dialectic to the binary--thesis, antithesis, synthesis,
>> > rather
>> > than off, on, zero one, right, wrong. I guess I run on analog.
>>
>> Just as a short note - I don't see that he necessarily is binary at
>> all - nor for that matter that his challenge is. (It's clearly
>> directed, imo, at religious folk with tautological / closed-loop
>> belief systems...)
>>
>> He is making a distinction between tinkering and creativity, or
>> tinkering and neogenesis perhaps. One could call them both 'creative'
>> in some sense, but I feel that the distinction is a worthwhile one,
>> and reflected in how most folk do conlanging - by hearing about how
>> some language does X, and incoprorating it or a small variation
>> thereof. This, rather than thinking of entirely new ways of doing X,
>> or choosing not to do X at all (viz. Kelen), or otherwise going
>> outside of the usual scope of language.
>>
>> Which, as I said, is of course a plenty wide scope to start with. But
>> I'm never one to be content with it just 'cause of that. :-p
>>
>> - Sai
>>
>
>
> --
> Mark J. Reed <markjreed@...>
>
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