Loglan: Difference between revisions
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imported>Andrew Alexander Wallace (New page: {{subpages}} The name '''loglan''' refers to an artificially created language which James Cook Brown originally developed in 1955 but has since received numerous contributions form other ...) |
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The name '''loglan''' refers to an artificially created language which James Cook Brown originally developed in 1955 but has since received numerous contributions form other people. The language falls into the classification of a logical language and its form has similarities to predicate [[logic]]. It was originally developed to test the [[Sapir-Whorf hypothesis]] but its unambiguous construction means that it has applications in the area of [[Artificial Intelligence]] and as a plant around second or auxiliary language.<ref name="Brown" >{{cite book | last = Brown | The name '''loglan''' refers to an artificially created language which James Cook Brown originally developed in 1955 but has since received numerous contributions form other people. The language falls into the classification of a logical language and its form has similarities to predicate [[logic]]. It was originally developed to test the [[Sapir-Whorf hypothesis]] but its unambiguous construction means that it has applications in the area of [[Artificial Intelligence]] and as a plant around second or auxiliary language.<ref name="Brown" >{{cite book | last = Brown. | first = James Cook | authorlink = James Cook Brown., | coauthors = | title = Loglan 1 : A logical Language | publisher = Syracuse University Press | date = 1989 | location = | pages = | url = | doi = | isbn = }}</ref> | ||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 04:39, 7 July 2008
The name loglan refers to an artificially created language which James Cook Brown originally developed in 1955 but has since received numerous contributions form other people. The language falls into the classification of a logical language and its form has similarities to predicate logic. It was originally developed to test the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis but its unambiguous construction means that it has applications in the area of Artificial Intelligence and as a plant around second or auxiliary language.[1]
References
- ↑ Brown., James Cook (1989). Loglan 1 : A logical Language. Syracuse University Press.