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by jwecker
4326 days ago
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Point taken, and I acknowledged in my first comment that it was a weak reason compared to the reasons for adopting. It wasn't meant as advocacy :-) I would point out however that no one (that I know of) claims that English is the most popular because it is intrinsically the most efficient for all situations- i.e., on its merits as an efficient language rather than geopolitical factors. I definitely think that there are certain situations where communicating using non-English would be (locally) optimal- even if the parties communicating were fluent in English. Even as a native English speaker I truly wish English had the equivalent of the Tagalog particle "daw/raw," for example ( http://tagaloglang.com/Tagalog-English-Dictionary/English-Tr... ), or the fact that Cantonese can often communicate the same information as English using far fewer syllables... In other words, I'm perfectly fine saying that using English is globally optimal (and convenient for me) because of its adoption, while still being perfectly happy knowing that some languages have attributes that make them more efficient, if you know them, in certain circumstances. I don't pretend ex-facto that English got this way because it is a truly superior solution in all circumstances if only everyone knew it. Nor do I feel like English's status as a (quasi)-standard is threatened by someone pointing out that Swedish would be more efficient in some settings (say, family history) even if everyone did know English. I would say "cool." Defining units in terms of other units via something other than base-10 scaling in order to have more integer factors than 2 and 5- in some cases trading the 5 for 3 and 4- can be advantageous. That's all I'm saying, nothing more or less :-) |
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