From: Rick McCallister
Message: 70568
Date: 2012-12-11
> [Top-posting corrected.]*Bhr.: I meant that phonological changes from Proto-West-Germanic to
>
> At 8:21:00 PM on Monday, December 10, 2012,
> Bhrihskwobhloukstroy wrote:
>
>> 2012/12/11, Brian M. Scott <bm.brian@...>:
>
>>> At 7:55:12 PM on Monday, December 10, 2012,
>>> Bhrihskwobhloukstroy wrote:
>
>>>> It's apparent that reconstructable phonology has had an
>>>> impressive rising of its rate of change in the latest
>>>> millennia (at least up to the Middle Ages included).
>
>>> It is?
>
> That's a serious question; I'd like an answer.
>(...)
>*Bhr.: OK, very sorry, I tak note of that. I beg Your pardon
>> Then be satisfied with invented substrates and the Far
>> West Model of PIE. It seems that You all consider
>> Glottochronology a better attested fact than plain
>> etymological method.
>
> Quatsch. I'm extremely skeptical of glottochronology.
>
>> What's incredible to me is that You all practically hate*Bhr.: please read my reply to DGK for a tentative demonstration that
>> PIE: it has above all to be restricted, limited,
>> short-lived, with the smallest amount of words and
>> phonemes,
>
> Piffle. I simply accept the uniformity principles as sound
> heuristics, so sound that proposed violations must be very
> well supported. Failure to do so leaves one open to
> excesses every bit as silly as Sean's opt. snd. 'laws',
> albeit of a very different sort.
>*Bhr.: by "You all" I mean everyone who without reasonable doubts
>> while invented substrates flourish undemonstrated... You
>> all really prefer invented languages to reconstructed PIE
>
> I don't believe that I've said much one way or another about
> substrates since your appearance here, apart from objecting
> to Tavi's parody of historical linguistics; in the past I've
> been highly critical of Torsten's predilection for positing
> substrates on the basis of uncritical Worthäufungen. On
> this subject I'm inclined to agree with Roger Lass:
>
> This decision [viz., not to reconstruct an IE root that
> would have to have been lost everywhere save in one
> subfamily or small areal grouping, and not to admit
> large-scale word creation ex nihilo in established
> languages] leads to a lot of imaginary languages being
> sucked out of linguists' thumbs; but it can also
> occasionally lead to discoveries of considerable and
> wide-ranging historical importance.
>
> In fact, I'm really not sure to whom 'You all' could refer.
> DGK does IE linguistics. Sean is on record as believing
> that 'All known languages not currently classified as IE are
> actually from one branch of IE: Indo-Iranian'.
>
> <http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/cybalist/message/62318>.
>
> Shivraj is an ideologue with no real interest in the
> subject. Jörg has merely observed that there must have been
> substrates in at least some parts of the area eventually
> covered by IE speakers; acknowledging their almost certain
> existence is a far cry from making specific claims about
> them. João mostly asks questions, and I can't recall any
> instances of Rick beating the drum for substrates. Does
> 'You all' really refer to anyone besides Tavi?
>
> Brian
>
>