On 3/26/2017 9:23 AM, Michael Everson wrote:
On 26 Mar 2017, at 17:02, Asmus Freytag <asm...@ix.netcom.com> wrote:
On 3/26/2017 6:18 AM, Michael Everson wrote:

In any case it’s not a disunification. Some characters are encoded; they were 
used to write diphthongs in 1855. These characters were abandoned by 1859, and 
other characters were devised.
Calling them "characters" is pre-judging the issue, don't you think?
No, I don’t think so.

I really think it is.

We know that these are different shapes, but that they stand for the same text 
elements.
No, they don’t. Those diphthongs can also be represented in other ways in 
Deseret.

Having alternative ways to represent these doesn't invalidate or affect my argument.

I’ve never accepted the view that “everything is already encoded and everything 
new is a disunification” which seems to be a pretty common view.

I would not say I aspire to the view you quote.

If you encode a certain shape, it may get used for a range of text elements. This would (de facto) encode these text elements via that shape. If it is later felt that the given shape should not be used for the full range of text elements, then you could say that the "implicit" unification based on the usage (or, if you will, "fallback usage") was mistaken and should be better handled by two (or more) shapes. This represents a "de-facto" disunification.

However, where I part from your description is the "everything is already encoded". That would not be the case anywhere a range of text elements cannot be represented at all. Your statement also implies a "correctly encoded" or "successfully encoded" which is different from "there's an encoding that some people use as a fallback", which, if disunification should prove proper later on, would be a better way of describing what was the original situation.

Perhaps the point is subtle, but it is important.

In the current case, you have the opposite, to wit, the text elements are unchanged, but you would like to add alternate code elements to represent what are, ultimately, the same text elements. That's not disunification, but dual encoding.

A./

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