I'm working on a conlang (constructed language) and would like some input from the Less Wrong community. One of the goals is to investigate the old Sapir-Whorf hypothesis regarding language affecting cognition. Does anyone here have any ideas regarding linguistic mechanisms that would encourage more rational thinking, apart from those that are present in the oft-discussed conlangs e-prime, loglan, and its offshoot lojban? Or perhaps mechanisms that are used in one of those conlangs, but might be buried too deeply for a person such as myself, who only has superficial knowledge about them, to have recognized? Any input is welcomed, from other conlangs to crazy ideas.
It's not possible to represent every possible set of relationships this way (you can't even say "adopted child of the gay spouse of my stepfather's brother", let alone variations on teacher and classmate). So what you're actually doing is creating a system that can easily represent some sort of relations, at the cost of making it more difficult to represent others.
I think you are confusing "easy to create a system for" and "most useful". It is easy to create a system which specifies "father of father of mother of father of..." It is hard to create a system which specifies things you would actually need to specify often. Your system is efficient in the first sense but not in the second sense.
I'm not making it more difficult to represent others. I don't lose anything that English can do.