Rationality requires intelligence, and the kind of intelligence that we use (for communication, progress, FAI, etc.) runs on language.
It seems that the place we should start is optimizing language for intelligence and rationality. One of SIAI's proposals includes using Lojban to interface between humans and an FAI. And of course, I should hope the programming language used to build a FAI would be "rational". But it would seem to me that the human-generated priors, correct epistemic rationality, decision theory, metaethics, etc. all depend on using a language that sufficiently rigorously maps to our territory.
Are "naturally evolved" languages such as English sufficient, with EY-style taboos and neologisms? Or are they sick to the core?
Please forgive and point me towards previous discussion or sequences about this topic.
So how many people reading have actually learnt Lojban?
(I think there's one person actually interested in Lojban on RW ...)
I was involved with Loglan and Lojban (which forked from Loglan) years ago, and learnt some of both, although never to the point of being able to use them without constant recourse to the dictionary.
I found it useful, not so much for using, but for some ways it provides of looking at the constructions of any human language. In English, you can say that something is "good". The equivalent Lo**an word -- let's assume it's "gudbi" -- is at least a 4-place relation: X1 is better than X2 for purpose X3 by standard X4. You can still say &quo... (read more)