Pangaean Code: Difference between revisions

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{{Construction}}
{{Construction}}
Pangaean, also referred to as the Codex or Primordial Grammar, is a [[Philosophical language|philosophical]] [[ab interiori language]] that consists on codifying the atomic units of human knowledge into articulated sounds as an [[w:Alphabet of human thought|alphabet of thought]]. Its creator, [[User:Veno|Veno]], named it after the hypothesis of [[Paleolithic Codes]], wherein the language would be the oldest one.
The Codex is very similar to [[w:Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz|Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz]]' idealization of a [[w:Characteristica Universalis|Characteristica Universalis]], although the presence of [[w:Mnemonic|Mnemonics]] and [[w:Sound symbolism|Sound Symbolism]] may set it apart from a genuine [[w:Calculus ratiocinator|calculus ratiocinator]]. Meaningful units are mimetic rather than numeric (called [[w:Phememe|phememes]]), whose discussion first appeared in [[w:Plato|Plato]]'s [[w:Cratylus (dialogue)|Cratylus]] before being developed in the 20<sup>th</sup> Century by anthropologist [[w:Mary LeCron Foster|Mary LeCron Foster]]. With those phememes [...]
[...]
Other constructed languages similar to the Pangaean Code include [[w:Ithkuil|Ithkuil]] (in morphological complexity), [[w:Lojban|Lojban]] (in syntactic complexity), and [[w:IEML|IEML]] (in semantic complexity).
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|image            = Flag of Avendonia full.png
|image            = Shanidar1.jpg
|imagesize        = 185px
|imagesize        = 185px
|imagecaption      = Photographed skull of Shanidar I
|imagecaption      = Photographed skull of Shanidar I
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|creator          = Veno
|creator          = Veno
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Pangaean, also referred to as the Codex or Primordial Grammar, is a [[Philosophical language|philosophical]] [[ab interiori language]] that consists on codifying the atomic units of human knowledge into articulated sounds as an [[w:Alphabet of human thought|alphabet of thought]]. Its creator, [[User:Veno|Veno]], named it after the hypothesis of [[Paleolithic Codes]], wherein the language would be the oldest one.
 
The Codex is very similar to [[w:Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz|Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz]]' idealization of a [[w:Characteristica Universalis|Characteristica Universalis]], although the presence of [[w:Mnemonic|Mnemonics]] and [[w:Sound symbolism|Sound Symbolism]] may set it apart from a genuine [[w:Calculus ratiocinator|calculus ratiocinator]]. Meaningful units are mimetic rather than numeric (called [[w:Phememe|phememes]]), whose discussion first appeared in [[w:Plato|Plato]]'s [[w:Cratylus (dialogue)|Cratylus]] before being developed in the 20<sup>th</sup> Century by anthropologist [[w:Mary LeCron Foster|Mary LeCron Foster]]. With those phememes [...]
 
[...]
 
Other constructed languages similar to the Pangaean Code include [[w:Ithkuil|Ithkuil]] (in morphological complexity), [[w:Lojban|Lojban]] (in syntactic complexity), and [[w:IEML|IEML]] (in semantic complexity).


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