If the english word 'poobah' came to mean 'peace be upon him' then you could say that instead, right?
Quote:it would be pretty tedius to write it in full every time his name was mentioned, pbuh
Isn't it also tedious to say it?
Quote:As has been pointed out, writing is a form of abbreviation
Not exactly, it is a conversion to a different form. If someone says CSIRO, then that is an abbreviation. Going from saying it to writing it adds complexity.
Quote:an alphabet is just a series of characters that enable us to encode higher/broader concepts into a symbolic form
An alphabet encodes sounds, not concepts. By themselves those sounds have no meaning (except for maybe 'I'). It is when you string them together to represent a word that has meaning that they can start to represent concepts. So I don't really see the difference between using the abbreviation in writing and using it in sound. We don't have any funny rules that you can write CSIRO but you have to pronounce it fully.
Quote:In reality those symbols/characters have no meaning at all, other than the fact other human beings recognise them and their ascribed meanings.
The symbols represent sounds, not meanings.
Quote:So since you've all been told what "pbuh" represents
Not all of us have. It took me a while to figure it out. I had to ask I think. There are plenty of guests and 'drive by' members who would have no idea what you are on about. It reminds me of people who use text style writing on forums (eg l8 for late). When you get kids on forums doing that sort of thing, they usually get criticised for it.
Quote:which you unconciously already decode everytime you read it anyway to represent the sounds we associate with those 17 characters
When I read CSIRO, I decode it into five letters, not five words. I don't even know what the five words are any more. I don't see that as disrespectful to the scientists who work there.