Dear Fellow Researchers,
What if it were possible to perceive ANY natural language in terms of a universal subsurface language upon which all surface languages are constructed?
1. There would be an absolute minimum of troublesome ambiguity about the exact meaning intended by theoretical researchers or by people documenting languages in the field.
2. Accurate observations about languages could be used with minimal fine tuning for purposes of computerized parsing, text generation, and machine translation.
3. It might become much easier to compare various features exhibited by natural languages because each one would be measured against a universal standard.
Etc. etc.
It is clear that all languages work in essentially the same ways. Take a healthy infant from any race of man and raise him/her in any linguistic/cultural setting, and he/she will learn the local language as readily as any other healthy child. My working hypothesis is that all natural languages are just the surface expressions allowed by a universal subsurface language common to us all, and careful research has born this out consistently in all cases studied thus far.
I am looking for researchers interested in cooperating with me to unlock the mysteries of Panlingua, which I define as this universal subsurface language common to all of mankind. Much of the groundwork has already been done, but this is far to great an enterprise for just one man.
I am dedicated to the development and dissemination of knowledge about Panlingua, how it works, and how it can be implemented in automated systems.
A rough manual of Panlingua containing all the basic points that have been worked out thus far is available from me free of charge, and I am available and willing to answer any questions. My research is based upon computer modeling, and I am also willing to answer basic questions about that, and to explain how the various linguistic components, or modules, can be made to work together in automated systems.
I feel certain that the rigorous application of Panlingua theory to the preservation of dying languages would make it possible to record them in far greater detail for future reference than is possible using the current, less systematic methods of today, and I am deeply concerned that this should be done before it is everlastingly too late.
For more information please e-mail me directly at:
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With best regards, Chaumont Devin.
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