Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!eecae!netnews.upenn.edu!rutgers!cbmvax!snark!eric From: eric@snark.uu.net (Eric S. Raymond) Newsgroups: comp.ai Subject: Re: Whig's slip reveals the current Queen of France to be bald. Message-ID: Date: 2 Feb 89 17:31:59 GMT References: <697@csd4.milw.wisc.edu> Followup-To: rec.arts.sf-lovers,comp.ai Organization: Willam Claude Dukenfield Discordian Cabal Lines: 68 In <697@csd4.milw.wisc.edu>, markh@csd4.milw.wisc.edu (Mark William Hopkins) writes: > How much we place assumptions in the background depends on how much we > regard its assertion to already be an integral part of the network of > assumptions that the speaker believes the hearer to share. Interesting. I know of one domain where the use of implied existentials (the kind of `backgrounded' assertion you describe) is not only superior technique but a positive good -- the writing of science fiction. Consider the number of background existentials asserted in the following: "As Koreth's aircar skimmed over the rise, the Forerunner city stood revealed in the light of the twin suns." By modern SF standards this is a well-constructed expository sentence. Robert Heinlein and other writers associated with John W. Campbell's _Astounding_ magazine developed this technique of exposition by implication in the late Thirties and early Forties. Yours is the first analysis of implied claims I have seen that suggests a formal characterization for it. One school of SF criticism, focusing on the importance of this kind of construction, has claimed that SF is a genre properly characterized not by its props or history but as a *style of reading*, one in which (among other things expository) text is deconstructed *primarily for (what you have described as) its background existentials*. Thus, to a person who is practiced in the SF style of reading, the above sentence is resonant with color and meaning; it implies an entire universe of exotic technologies, interstellar travel, and at least one long-vanished species of extraterrestrial (nor would an SF reader assume `Koreth' is human!). To a person unpracticed in this kind of deconstruction, on the other hand, the sentence is at best a sort of gaudy purple word-bauble and at worst simply an incomprehensible noise. I don't personally think this school tells the whole story; it is unable by itself to explain some other consistent features of SF (such as its tendencies towards technophilia, individualist political philosophies, and a sort of prosyletic zeal about rationality) but I think it certainly illuminates SF's characteristic prose constructions and explains why outsiders so frequently miss the point of them. Here's the tie back to AI. The process by which SF readers assemble the implied counterfactuals of a text to construct a consistent world-picture is a marked version of what any language-understanding system must accomplish. What makes the SF case interesting is that experienced readers have no apparent problem maintaining internal representations of *multiple worlds*, some with utterly bizarre premises. My own introspection suggests that this is handled by evolution of a set of `prototypical' worlds that work out the implications on traditional SF themes; new stories are either analyzed as variations on a type or become new major prototypes. SF writers have become very skilled and subtle at exploiting the analytical reading style of their readers; in fact, reading a new novel often has the aspect of a sort of intimate intellectual contest between reader and author, in which a large part of the reader's fun comes from reconstructing the author's world and anticipating what the author will do with it. Meanwhile the author tries to evoke a world without telegraphing the plot. Comprehension in this kind of context would make a wonderful `torture test' for knowledge-representation and language-understanding systems, because it emphasizes precisely the challenges in comprehension of `normal' prose that are most difficult to capture. Perhaps we should be trying to aim our machines at appreciating _The_Moon_Is_A_Harsh_Mistress_ rather than _Dick_And_Jane_! -- Eric S. Raymond (the mad mastermind of TMN-Netnews) Email: eric@snark.uu.net CompuServe: [72037,2306] Post: 22 S. Warren Avenue, Malvern, PA 19355 Phone: (215)-296-5718