Of course not! The two are not one in the same. The ancient text no longer has users. Current texts do. Current texts are still used, and that is precisely what grounds the certainty of answering in the affirmative when asked "Can the meaning of any text persist through time?" The use throughout time of current langauges is precisely the ground upon which we can certainly conclude that the meaning of a text can persist through time. — creativesoul
But... regarding the OP, all we can conclude is that the meaning of the ancient text persisted throughout the time period during it's use. — creativesoul
It comes pretty naturally out of what follows, I think. You treat meaning rather like a thing or a property, whereupon it seems mysterious that it could survive without a context, and how does it survive, in what form etc. I'm saying that if we just look at what we mean by meaning and especially mean, these concerns seem to miss the point. — jamalrob
I take you to mean an ancient text in an unknown language that is as yet undeciphered.
In one sense it is meaningful: we know it means something, but we don't know what. We recognize it as language, that it had a role in a culture, and so on.
In another sense it is not meaningful: it's meaningless to us, it carries no meaning in practice to any language-using meaning-making creatures.
So asking if the meaning was lost when its culture disappeared or is somehow still contained in the stone tablet, waiting to be released again, is ambiguous. It's either, depending on how you're using the word "meaning". — jamalrob
You seem to be doing it again where you’re interpreting the act of eating under a materialist ontology, and so I assume accusing idealism of entailing that we swallow and digest experiences with our mind-independent physical bodies.
Of course the problem here is you trying to mix materialism and idealism together. So stop doing that as it’s ridiculous. There’s just the experience of eating an orange, and like with a painting or a dream we can separate it out and say “this part is the orange and that part is my mouth”. — Michael
Look for definitions of the words before you answer? — ssu
Delete the posts in question. It's inevitable you'll get posters talking past each other especially as a lot of posts here are likely written while multi-tasking or in haste. Ideally, we should just all slow down. But, realistically, that's not going to happen. — Baden
No, but neither does the hammer. All use is contingent on a user. If you prefer we could refer to the hammer's potential use. It's still a property of the hammer (that it is potentially used to drive nails) and we still derive what that use is from its history (even if only a minute ago), not its current state. — Isaac
Do you think the fact that a hammer is used to drive nails is a property of the hammer?
— Isaac
No, that wouldn't just be a property of the hammer. It would be a property of the hammer, the nails, the air between the hammer and the nails, the person or machine swinging the hammer, etc. — Terrapin Station
I assert that meaning is use and thus the word has a meaning (its use, or history of use) independent of humans currently using it. — Isaac
The orange is part of the experience, just as a dent is part of the car door. Your mistake, again, is in trying to understand idealism from the perspective of materialism, where experience is one thing and the object of experience is some separate thing, but that's not how it is for idealism. There's just the experience of eating an orange and we pick out parts of the experience and name them ("orange", "man", "mouth", etc.). — Michael
S, I did a breakdown of your OP, charitably steelmanning it, to show how it didn't work. I engaged with the form and substance of your argument, thoughtfully.
You did not respond in the same way. The biggest part of your response to my post was, bizarrely, to Banno, directing to him this steelmanned version in retaliation for what you perceived as a previous slight. There wasn't much to the rest of the post, but it ended with you more or less ignoring my criticism in order to say that, in any case, you disagree with the people who disagree with you.
You've since added the point that if you explained your post to other people, they'd probably agree with you.
You've accused me of point-scoring, but your approach through the majority of this thread has been to quote others who agree with you with a '100' or other variations on 'nailed it,' while fisking other posts in a patently point-scoring way. (this is a tu quoque, by the way.)
You've glowingly approved theorem's caricature of idealists as self-important, while saying things like 'It's time for a new breed of philosophers to throw off the chains, escape the scourge' etc. With a characteristic note of martyrdom, you compared your approach to that of a historical figure executed for spreading information to the masses.
You can understand my frustration. I remain suspicious that you don't quite understand the difference between OLP therapeutics (which I am a fan of ) and appeals to incredulity + pose-striking. — csalisbury
Meaning doesn't require a subject due to a definition. The realization that it requires a subject is the result of an ontological investigation/analysis. — Terrapin Station
I have more than one, but at least mine aren’t up my ass! :lol: — Noah Te Stroete
I was being charitable. — Noah Te Stroete
(My left brain is yelling at my right brain right now.) — Noah Te Stroete
You’re still a dick. :kiss: — Noah Te Stroete
S may be a dick sometimes, but at least I have respect for him. Others, not so much. — Noah Te Stroete
I am done. — Amity
You are right. I was referring to the thread but you know how shit spreads...or how one rotten apple spoils the whole barrel... — Amity
Fair enough. Do other moderators hold the same view about this kind of 'discussion'? It is not about being upset, it is about challenging online behaviour. — Amity
The title itself I simply rolled my eyes at and felt utter contempt at such expression. — Amity
It's one discussion out of hundreds in the Lounge. Just ignore it like most of the rest of us do. — Baden
What could possibly suggest I’m confused? Because I don’t agree with you? Because I don’t stick to your usage? Because the authority I’m using is confusing to you?
You can’t even know for sure I don’t completely agree with every thing you say, but took the antagonist approach just for the fun of it. — Mww
Oh but I don’t, in principle. Only difference is yours is necessary but insufficient, whereas mine is both because a form of idealism is attached as its complement. — Mww
Ahhhh. So “you’re sooooo stupid!!!” is a successful refutation in your world? — Mww
No, rocks are not always just rocks. And I'll thank you not to try that one on again. — Baden
The disagreement with S isn't at all about "The word 'dog' WAS used to refer to dogs." It's not about something historical.
The disagreement with S is that in S's view, the word dog has a meaning--not past tense, but present tense--at time T2, even if no persons exist at time T2. He's not saying something about how the word was used there. He's saying that the word has a meaning at T2, which is a correct meaning at T2 (not a correct meaning about or in the context of T1, where we're simply reporting usage at a past time). — Terrapin Station
Meaning isn't a property of objects like hammers. Meaning is a mental activity that we engage in.
— Terrapin Station
Unless I've missed something, I thought that was the topic of this thread, merely asserting it does nothing to progress the discussion. — Isaac
So where is the fact that the hammer was used to hit nails? — Isaac
If humans capable of recollecting the fact ceased to exist would it cease to be the case that the hammer was used to hit nails? — Isaac
...meaning is a mental activity... — Terrapin Station
But it isn’t. Lots have done what you are doing, mocking it without refuting it.
Go figure. — Mww
Along with Einstein, Newton, Galileo, Hawking, just to name a few.
Good company. — Mww
Of course I’m a realist. How foolish to suppose there aren’t real things in the real world. Besides, I couldn’t explain my very own self if I denied objective reality. And if I acknowledge objective reality as not only reasonable, but absolutely necessary, I cannot then deny that same objective reality, and by association its contents, as present when I am not.
I call anyone an idealist if they are rational thinkers. Whether or not those anyone’s agree is nothing to me; it’s just what the name implies. — Mww
It's also an argument I didn't make. In fact I brought up the argument you're imputing to me, later on in the same post, in order to say that it doesn't work. — csalisbury
Exactly. The bottom line is that "plausibility" and "good sense" are all you have to fall back on in your war against the idealists. But that won't bother the idealist one bit because they know that sometimes what seems plausible or sensible to the majority is nothing more than ignorance. You see, the idealist is one of an enlightened few and has seen through the smokescreen of naive realism and has grasped the Truth!
Besides, there's all sorts of ways to get around these kinds of objections. We could posit God, the World Spirit, the Absolute, the Will or anything else we can dream up to account for the fact that things continue to exist even when you and I are not experiencing them. — Theorem
There’s a painting of a man eating an orange. What is the nature of the orange? It’s paint. But the painting isn’t a painting of a man eating paint; it’s a painting of a man eating an orange. — Michael
I dream of eating an orange. What is the nature of the orange? It’s a dream. But I’m not dreaming of eating a dream; I’m dreaming of eating an orange. — Michael
Your description of idealism still seems to mix ontologies by assuming a materialist understanding of eating. — Michael
So there’s meaning when there’s thinking. Is there meaning when there isn’t thinking (or speaking)? — Michael
I have no experience of oranges in cupboards. — Mww
If you tell me there is an orange behind the cupboard door, I’ll say....ok, take you’re word for it. But no such knowledge of fact is available to me. Still, because I know “orange” and I know “cupboard”, I know a priori the possibility of oranges in cupboards is not self contradictory and is at the same time quite possible. Just like those stupid f’ing rocks. — Mww
No, actually, they do not. — Mww
The orange *talked about* IS the orange of experience... — Mww
The orange you ate is certainly an orange, the orange in the cupboard is possibly an orange. — Mww
I feel like we're having the same conversation in two different places.
I'm not talking here about the meaning of blue. I'm talking about blue, the wavelength. In order to say the cup is blue (blueness is a property of the cup) it is sufficient in your view, that it emits a wavelength which any intercepting object capable of recognising it would register as blue. An incorrectly tuned spectrometer may register it as red, but it would be wrong.
The word "dog" (as a collection of sound waves) emits these sound waves which, upon being intercepted by anything correctly calibrated to recognise them, would produce the image of a dog.
Yet the cup's ability to make capable recipients register 'blue' is a property of he cup, yet the word "dog"'s ability to make capable recipients conjure the image of a dog is not a property of the word, but of the capable recipient. — Isaac
They went too far down the rabbit hole. — ZhouBoTong
If we try to imagine an apple, but leave out perspective and a subjective sense of time, we cannot do so. — csalisbury
The only thing left is to accept that there is a mystery at the heart of it, something that we cannot understand through philosophy or thinking alone, maybe cannot understand at all. — csalisbury
But the proper use of the gem, imo, is to show us that whatever there is, beyond our thought and experience, it is confused to think of it as something that's basically like how we experience the apple, only unexperienced. That in itself is a kind of idealism, only one that isn't self-aware. — csalisbury
Ignoring it then leaves one with rationality in general and humanity in particular irreducible to a non-contradictory fundamental condition, because the only other possible methodology, empirical science, cannot provide one. Yet. So far. — Mww
All physical objects also happen to be objects of experience OR POSSIBLE experience. — Mww
It could also be re-written as, all KNOWN physical objects also happen to be objects of experience. Not even science can deny that. — Mww
