Anthropology
Related: About this forumAn Ancient Puzzle Posed 2,500 Years Ago Now Has an Ingenious Solution
HUMANS
18 December 2022
ByCARLY CASSELLA
An 18th-century copy of Pāṇini's work. (Cambridge University Library)
Thousands of years ago, a man living in what is now India wrote down all the grammatical guidelines that govern Sanskrit; one of the earliest documented languages in the ancient world.
His name was Pāṇini, and his 4,000-some grammatical sūtras, or rules, are supposed to work like an algorithm that can generate grammatically correct words from a base and suffix.
For centuries, linguists have been trying to rebuild this 'language machine' using the thousands of steps described by Pāṇini in his legendary text, the Aṣṭādhyāyī. And yet it never really has run as it should.
A PhD student at the University of Cambridge, Rishi Rajpopat, thinks he's finally cracked the ancient puzzle, and his solution is impressively simple. All that it does is change the interpretation of one 'metarule' outlined by Pāṇini, and voila, the machine runs by itself with almost no exceptions.
More:
https://www.sciencealert.com/an-ancient-puzzle-posed-2500-years-ago-now-has-an-ingenious-solution
Easterncedar
(3,532 posts)The aha moment there is fun to imagine. Another topic I knew nothing about. Thanks again, Judi Lynn. You make life more interesting!
Judi Lynn
(162,385 posts)Overwhelming!
Thank you for reading this article.
Judi Lynn
(162,385 posts)BY MOIRA RITTER
DECEMBER 16, 2022 2:09 PM
An ancient grammar problem has left experts stumped for 2,500 years. Now the code has been cracked by a Ph.D student.
Rishi Rajpopat was conducting research for his University of Cambridge thesis, which was published Dec. 15, when he solved a centuries-old puzzle surrounding a rule taught by Pāṇini, known as the father of linguistics, according to a news release from the university.
The discovery has been called revolutionary and will allow any Sanskrit word to be derived using Paṇinis language machine, the university said. It could also mea that for the first time, Paṇinis grammar can be programmed and taught to computers.
Sanskrit is an ancient language deriving from South-Asia and is the sacred language of Hinduism, according to the university. It has also been used in some of Indias scientific, philosophical and secular literature.
STUDENTS THEORY IS KEY FOR SOLVING RULE-CONFLICTS
While Pāṇinis rules have provided scholars the means to understand Sanskrit, some rules are can be applied in the same circumstances, causing confusion among experts.
Read more at: https://www.charlotteobserver.com/news/nation-world/national/article270104257.html#storylink=cpy
or,
https://archive.ph/BueH2