ROFL Francis - Orwell had much to say on the divorce of language from
day-to-day experience.  Pat's construction might be analogous to my
own concern that language is more biological than we admit.

On 16 Feb, 18:55, frantheman <[email protected]> wrote:
> Personally, Pat, I think you're constructing a wonderful artificial
> structure here, which follows completely conventional analyses of
> language structures and their written expressions. It might, in the
> long run, be more productive to investigate the Magnum Opus. Having
> found the lapis philosophorum, you could then raid the roof of your
> local church, transmute the lead into gold and thus solve all your
> financial problems :-)
>
> Francis
>
> On 16 Feb., 14:57, Pat <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> >      I thought that, since the concept of ‘The Pen’ had been
> > discussed, that I might take this opportunity to mention a couple of
> > things.  Firstly, the concept of ‘The Pen’ and how it relates to ‘The
> > Word of God’ might be obvious to some but not others.  It was a
> > concept that was revealed in the very first Revelation to the Prophet
> > Mohammed (pbuh).
> >      The first 5 lines of Surah 96 (Al Alaq [the Clot]) were the very
> > first lines revealed and here they are:
>
> > 96:1 Read! In the name of your Lord and Cherisher, who created
> >         Iqra!  Bismi rabbika-lladhi khalaq
>
> > 96:2 Created man from a clot of congealed blood.
> >         Khalaq-al-insana min alaq
>
> > 96:3 Read!  And your Lord is Most Bountiful
> >         Iqra!  Wa Rabbuka-al-Akram
>
> > 96:4 He who taught by the Pen
> >         Alladhi allama bil-qalam
>
> > 96:5 Taught man that which he knew not.
> >         Allam al insana ma lam ya lam.
>
> >      If you read the transliterated Arabic above, you can get a feel
> > for the rhythm and the rhyme that simply doesn’t come across in the
> > translation.  The entire Qur’an of 6,616 verses is like that.  That’s
> > why it was easy to learn for native Arabic speakers, who were used to
> > oral traditions and story-telling.  Also, the word Qur’an means
> > ‘recital’, as it was intended to be spoken, as it was, originally,
> > revealed to a man, The Prophet Mohammed (pbuh), who was illiterate.
> > And no one has been able since, to create any poetry like it—not in
> > rhythm, rhyme and depth of meaning.
> >      It dawned on me, over the weekend, that there is another analogy
> > between ‘The Pen’, ‘The Word of God’, language and matter itself.  It
> > has been a part of Jewish, Christian and Islamic doctrine that God
> > created the universe via His ‘Word’.  But what, exactly, IS His Word?
> >      Let’s look at language and see how it relates to matter.  I think
> > sentences act like molecules.  Each one has a particular purpose,
> > structure and quality.  Yet they are made of words.  That makes words
> > akin to atoms.  But atoms are further divided into the sub-atomic
> > particles of hadrons and leptons like words are comprised of letters
> > which are either consonants or vowels.  Yet even letters can be viewed
> > as being made of lines, either straight or curved.  Here is an
> > allusion to String Theory and the concept of closed and open strings.
> > Also, atoms (words) fall into 8 periods in the Periodic Table of
> > Elements.  These are, in a way, akin to the 8 parts of speech: nouns,
> > verbs, pronouns, adjectives, adverbs, conjunctions, prepositions and
> > interjections.  Yet some elements fall into transitional groups.
> > Theses would be akin to the concepts of participles and gerunds.  A
> > participle is a verb-like word that acts like an adjective, e.g., the
> > word ‘sinking’ in the sentence: “Every time I see the film ‘Titanic’,
> > I get a certain sinking feeling.  The word ‘sinking’, although it is a
> > verb, acts as an adjective to describe the word ‘feeling’ and is,
> > technically, a participle.  The word ‘feeling’ in that sentence,
> > although it is a verb, acts like a noun and is, technically, a
> > gerund.  These are transitional parts of speech where one type of word
> > acts as a different part of speech than it may appear.
> >      So, let’s map out the parts of speech to the Periodic Table based
> > on Semitic language.  Firstly, it’s easy to see that interjections
> > stand alone and do not combine with other parts of speech; therefore,
> > the interjection is Period 8 (The Inert or Noble gases).  All Semitic
> > languages have their root words as verbs.  Verbs are conjugated, have
> > tenses, number and person.  They are the most configurable and seem
> > the most likely to sit at Period 1, as the Period 1 atoms combine with
> > other atoms the most.  Period 2, then, would seem to be nouns.  In
> > Semitic languages, nouns are formed from their root verb stems because
> > every action implies an actor.  Also, after Period 2 are the
> > Transitional Elements.  These are the verb forms that act as either
> > nouns (gerunds) or adjectives (participles).  Following that logic, at
> > the other end of the Transitional Elements is Period 3, which must be
> > the adjectives.  Now, we have to go back to the other end of the
> > table.  Pronouns stand for specific nouns, that is, they each have a
> > single antecedent, a noun upon which they depend.  This seems akin to
> > the Period 7 Halogen group as they can only combine with one other
> > atom.  Period 6 has two open places for connection with ‘others’ and
> > so seems to fit in well with the concept of a conjunction, which links
> > two ‘other’ things together.  The Period 5 group has three open places
> > for connection and seems a best fit for the concept of the preposition
> > which can relate one object to another either directly or indirectly
> > or both.  That leaves Period 4 as the adverbs.  And each period is
> > covered and directly corresponds to a part of speech.  If you think
> > I’ve left out the ‘article’, then think again.  The Lanthanide group
> > is most akin to the ‘definite article’, as they are all (well, with
> > the single exception of Promethium) non-radioactive and are stable
> > elements.  This leaves the Actinide group to be representative of the
> > ‘indefinite article’ as they are all radio-active and unstable and, in
> > that respect, indefinite, because they are unstable.  And now, all
> > parts of speech are covered by their corresponding aspect of the
> > Periodic Table of Elements.
> >      It is my hypothesis that God creates through these words or
> > elements and it is on that basis that the concept of ‘The Pen’ relates
> > to how God creates.  This completes the examples of how God’s creative
> > Word can be analogous to fermions, that is, the hadrons and leptons
> > that comprise atoms/elements.
> >      Yet there are subtle inferences that are implied.  For example,
> > the pen and the voice are the forces behind written and spoken
> > language.  And, of course, in each case, there must be an author and a
> > speaker.  These are other forces that act behind the pen and the
> > voice.  So, there are four forces behind this creative ability that
> > are analogous to the four bosonic forces of electro-magnetism,
> > gravity, and the weak and strong atomic forces.  Of all of these, the
> > analogy of ‘The Pen’ to the electro-magnetic force is the most obvious
> > because a pen is useless without ink.  So, as the ink goes with the
> > pen, the electric and magnetic forces are always found together.  The
> > voice, then, must be most analogous to gravity, as it is unseen but
> > moves us in ways unimaginable.  This leaves the weak and strong forces
> > being analogous to the author (weak) and the speaker (strong).  I
> > believe that the spoken word is more powerful than the written word
> > simply because one must learn to read in order for the written word to
> > be understood, whereas hearing is all that is required for the spoken
> > word to be comprehended.  Put another way, an illiterate individual
> > can be moved by the spoken word but not by the written.  Also, like
> > the strong atomic force, the spoken word is only heard by those who
> > can hear it (ignoring, of course, recordings OF spoken words, which
> > have made, only in recent years, the spoken word reach farther);
> > whereas the written word, like the weak atomic force, can stretch over
> > longer distances across both space and time.
> >      There!  That’s just a few thoughts I had before going to bed last
> > night.  Let me know what you think.

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