Wednesday, 5 September 2018

Communicating With The Sigman

Poul Anderson, The Byworlder, IV.

Position, gesture and possibly voluntary odours may be more important than sound;

sounds, from vibrating tympani, are only partly reproducible by a synthesizer;

the language simultaneously uses hundreds of frequencies and amplitudes;

communication may involve many concepts at once or deal with aspects of reality that human beings treat one piece at a time;

the Sigman speaks and possibly thinks more slowly than human beings;

attempts to synthesize his sounds have been annoying or even painful to him;

human drawings and alphabet have been too ugly;

constructing an artificial language manageable and comprehensible by both species failed;

Yvonne uses a computer to devise a language that obeys the harmony rules detectable in the Sigman's speech;

at last, the Sigman responds positively.

3 comments:

  1. Kaor, Paul!

    I regret that the Sigman found human drawings and alphabets ugly. It might be a minor art form, but calligraphy, the elegant and skillful writing of characters and letters, is still one of the arts. And was considered a major art in China and Japan.

    Sean

    ReplyDelete
  2. Sean,
    Yvonne says, "'Maybe we should have tried Chinese characters.'" (IV, p. 48)
    Paul.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Kaor, Paul!

    Or Egyptian hieroglyphics!

    Sean

    ReplyDelete