Comment author: Bayeslisk 14 February 2016 06:06:27AM 0 points [-]

On the advice of a new friend, I think that i will be coming to this, but will need some help navigating, since I currently live in Chicago and have been to Ann Arbor exactly once in my life 5 years ago.

Comment author: Kaj_Sotala 18 February 2015 03:49:08PM 6 points [-]

Out of curiosity, what is the correct answer to the example Raven's item? One of the answer candidates popped out to me immediately as the most likely one, and I'm interested to know whether that's a sign of me having superior pattern recognition ability or whether a part of me just wants to believe that.

Comment author: Bayeslisk 02 March 2015 07:37:23AM 1 point [-]

Oh, good. I got this too. With XOR. Contrary to other repliers, it seems to me like XOR is a simpler primitive than "the presence/absence of shapes forms a rectangle". It's more easily generalizable and doesn't rely on the existence of other patterns. As a cute curiosity, by the way, the XOR-ing works both vertically and horizontally.

Comment author: Bayeslisk 18 November 2014 02:33:05AM *  -6 points [-]

Just here to remind you to notice when you are confused. If you don't, this ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7BOWOMPUbvE ) WILL happen to you and everyone WILL laugh. And you wouldn't want that.

Comment author: Bayeslisk 16 November 2014 04:09:38AM 17 points [-]

I was slightly late, unfortunately, but filled out the whole thing anyway.

Comment author: RichardKennaway 23 May 2014 12:17:47PM *  0 points [-]

That's pretty much it. Privative "not" would be "to'e". The English "not" covers both senses according to context, but "not want" is always privative and some lengthier phrase has to be used to express absence of wanting. Or not so lengthy, e.g. "meh".

Comment author: Bayeslisk 24 May 2014 01:36:36AM 0 points [-]

Oh, cool. I've found the distinction to be a very useful one to make.

Comment author: RichardKennaway 22 May 2014 11:06:59PM *  3 points [-]

So 'I diswant ice cream' is a stronger statement than 'I do not want ice cream', though most people, whose language is less considered and precise, would (also) use the latter to cover the former.

Minor point of information. In English "do not want" is not the negation of want. It actually means what you have defined "diswant" to mean. The "not" is privative here, not merely negative. People are not being less considered and precise when they use it this way. They are using the words precisely as everyone but you uses them -- that is, precisely in accordance with what they mean.

You are welcome to invent a new language, just like English except that "not" always means simple negation and never means privation; but that language is not English. Neither, for that matter, would the corresponding modification of French be French. Comparing the morphology of translations of "want", "do not want", "have", and "do not have" in a further selection of languages with Google Translate suggests that the range of languages for which this is the case is large.

Comment author: Bayeslisk 22 May 2014 11:15:13PM 1 point [-]

I don't think I understand what you mean by privative. Is it something like the difference between "na'e" and "to'e" in Lojban? For reference: {mi na'e djica} would mean "I other-than want", and {mi to'e djica} would mean "I opposite-of want".

Comment author: Ixiel 28 April 2014 11:40:33AM 8 points [-]

Not sure how helpful my data is, but posted. Do I smell LW Adirondack on the wind? ;)

Comment author: Bayeslisk 30 April 2014 03:50:44AM 2 points [-]

LW Adirondack? I'm from Albany, and would show up if the time was right. I'm away at college at the moment.

Comment author: Bayeslisk 29 April 2014 03:49:28AM 8 points [-]

I filled in the form some time ago.

Comment author: Bayeslisk 24 March 2014 04:05:58AM 0 points [-]

I am unfortunately engaged all that day and thus will be unlikely to be able to show up.

Comment author: Bayeslisk 13 March 2014 03:41:47AM 0 points [-]

Hi there. Princeton LWist here. Me, 20%.

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