Does the phrase "the addition of other things" also refer to the addition of other things?
When expressions refer to the same thing, you should be able to substitute one expression for another salva veritate, in non-intensional contexts at least. So the following are equivalent in truth-value: — Srap Tasmaner
But you did confuse someone - me. If you didn't intend to confuse, then you didn't use the correct words to accomplish your goal. If your goal was to actually say something to me (which is evident by your post being a reply to me) - you failed and you failed because I didn't grasp your meaning (your intent in using those words). Saying, "I meant exactly what I said" doesn't help me at all. All that does is refer me back to those words that I don't understand. It doesn't help because you still haven't explained why you used those words (your intent).I haven't said I intended to confuse anyone, and I deny that I intended to confuse anyone. In fact I specified when there had been some discussion of what I said, that I meant exactly what I said. It was you that declared an intention to confuse. — unenlightened
But you have confused people with words.I don't doubt that you do intend to confuse people with your words, but I do not. — unenlightened
If you want to argue that correct word-use is a consensus of word-use, then how is it that Chinese (the most common language spoken) isn't the correct way to use words? If your argument is that any small group can use any symbol to refer to anything, and it actually be the correct word-use, then there can be no consensus of word use. It only takes two to agree on the symbols and what they refer to. To say that there is a consensus of word-use is to say that a particular group uses those words in that way to refer to some thing. Which groups are you talking about? If you are talking about all humans, then Chinese would be the most common way to use words. If you are talking about the United States, then all the non-English speakers are misusing words. This is absurd, so obviously correct word-use cannot be a consensus of word-use.An 'inside' seems to imply a boundary and an 'outside'. But this is normal; most people don't speak any given language, and many languages, such as Cockney rhyming slang, French Argot, and so on, are deliberately designed to exclude, and confuse 'outsiders'. So an inside joke is understood by the community it is directed at, and the consensus of people who are excluded from that community has no bearing. But how is all this relevant to our discussion? — unenlightened
Then a "transgender" is misusing words when a male calls themselves a "female"?When a Harry spurge psychic dilemma because five sideways, misusing symptom communicates upside. But all that's by the bye; The point is can you understand? I you can't then call it misuse or call it ad hom, or call it a fuckwit playing games. Whatever you call it will be a misuse of words. — unenlightened
When a man says "I'm a woman.", are they misusing words?Harry C. here meant (intended) to say the same thing as you, but regardless of his intentions, "banana" does not mean "look". He simply failed to use the words aright. — unenlightened
This seems like an impossible situation. How would a species even survive to make it to be an all male or all female species? There are species that are neither and can procreate just fine. Let's just say that if you are born different than the species you are part of and what makes you different would be a detriment to the species you are part of if they all had it (meaning that they wouldn't even be considered the same species), then it would be an illness to the survival of THAT species.If someone possesses a trait that, if all members of the species possessed would mean the demise of the species - like being hostile to other members, then that would be sufficient to call that trait an illness. — Harry Hindu
I'll have my own go at addressing this. What about being male and being female? If all members of the species were male, or if all members of the species were female, then that would mean the demise of the species. Therefore being male and being female are illnesses? — Michael
It's to say you're willing to assert the same proposition. If John says "Two is a prime number," we'd have to look to context to understand why John is saying this. Does he intend to correct someone else? Is he teaching math?
If you repeat that two is a prime number, you may do so without the same purpose as John, but you're still asserting the same proposition. — Mongrel
I still don't see a distinction. We are still using words to refer to things. Words are things that can be talked about just as your ideas, your trip to Rome, or your chicken soup recipe are all talked about. The quotes around a word is the symbol that we are referring to the word rather than to what the word means (what it refers to in the world).Use vs. mention — Srap Tasmaner
You need to use the dictionary to look up the word, "mention". It means to refer to something. By using words, you are mentioning something. To mean what they meant is to say that you share their same intentions.Saying what someone else says just to say what they said rather than to mean what they meant is not use, it's mention. — Srap Tasmaner
Read what he wrote again:I'm sure by "full time" he meant something along the lines of the standard 8 hours a day, 5 days a week. — Michael
Most people are already full time workers in that sense and still have time to have sex and raise a family, so no, that isn't what he meant.If everyone was a full time writer, or a woman, or for that matter, a metal worker, the species would die out. But these are not illnesses. — unenlightened
I only need the terms "thought/belief" to convey to others that I have a thought/belief. I don't need the words to think about thinking, only to convey that I'm thinking about thinking to others. I can imagine myself thinking about something without using those terms at all.This works from the dubious presupposition that being a thing is what allows introspection(metacognition).
We can think about our own thought/belief because of the terms "thought/belief". That is how. — creativesoul
Sensory data is the sounds, colors, shapes, smells, tastes, and tactile sensations that appear in the mind. If we didn't equate the data as being about something then, the sensory data would be the things themselves (solipsism). There would be no causal relation between the "data" and some external cause of the data. There would be no world for the data to be about. Our minds would effectively be the world. Making the distinction of sensory data being about something as opposed to not being about something is making the distinction between realism and solipsism.What is sensory data, and does containing it equate to being about it? — creativesoul
I'm not trying to distort anything. It is you that isn't taking everything I have said into account. I can use a chair as a step-stool, which has nothing to do with it's "proper" function, and it is useful in accomplishing the goal of reaching something higher than I can't reach without it. So how was the chair useless? It is only if I don't have a goal-in-mind, or if the tool isn't helping me accomplish the goal, that the "use" of something becomes useless.It seems you're trying to distort what I said by not taking the full context into account. I said you can "use" something "uselessly"; that is in the practically useless sense. If you are just playing with something in a way that has nothing at all to do with the proper function of the thing then you are not "using" it in a practical sense; and it is thus, in that sense, useless. — John
Yeah, so far so good.So your intended meaning causes you to use the word "look" rather than the word "banana" because ... you speak English and know that "look" has the meaning you intend, and "banana" does not. — unenlightened
Sure, if what you mean by "use" is to refer to a particular idea or thing or state-of-affairs that you intend to convey. Sure, if what you mean by "common usage" is the common idea, thing, or state-of-affairs that the word refers to. You can use words all day long, but if the other person doesn't know what the words refers to, then you can never understand it's use. Sure a congenitally blind person may copy someone's use of phrase, "The sky is blue". But do they really know what "blue" means? Knowing how to copy someone else's use of words doesn't entail that you know what the words mean - only how to use words. Would the congenitally blind person really understand what they are saying? Could the blind person then use the word, "blue" in a sentence that they have never heard? Could they then make their own sentence with the word, "blue" and it mean something?You use words this way because we (English speakers) use words this way. And it is common usage that confers meaning on the otherwise arbitrary grunts and squiggles. — unenlightened
Absolutely, but if language were use then how can different grunts an squiggles mean the same thing as other grunts and squiggles? Other languages also use words in different order with adjectives AFTER the noun as opposed to BEFORE, yet means the same thing in English. When translating words from different languages, we aren't translating their use, we are translating what the words refer to.And we know they are arbitrary grunts and squiggles, because those damn foreigners use completely different grunts and squiggles to say la meme chose exactement. — unenlightened
I think it's much more the case that you are running two senses of "use" together and failing to make the distinction between 'use' in the (practically) useless sense of playing or mucking around, and 'use' in the sense of employing a function.
The so-called "meaning is use" argument is only concerned with the latter, so instances of the former have no bearing on it. — John
No, entities have intentions and they use words to express their intentions. No intention prior, means no use of words at all, or at least no useful, or meaningful use of words - like I explained about using ANY tool. You have to have a goal-in-mind in order for any tool to be useful or meaningful, as a tool only becomes meaningful or useful in accomplishing a goal. Tools that don't help accomplish some goal are useless and meaningless to the goal."Meaning" can mean intention.
But the meaning of a word is not the intention of the word, because words do not have intentions. — unenlightened
Well, yeah, and I'd go a step further and say that any cause is the meaning of the effect. Tree rings in a tree stump mean the age of the tree and tree rings are the natural result of how the tree growa throughout the year. Our word use points to the idea in someone's head and their intention to express it. Both of these things need to exist prior to word use or the use of words would be meaningless and useless - in other words, the use of words doesn't point to any cause of their use."Meaning can also mean implication.
Footprints mean feet.
In this sense, footprints mean feet regardless of the intentions of the owner of the feet. — unenlightened
This has doesn't go against anything I have said. As I have said all along is that meaning is the relationship between cause and effect. When some other animal smells the odor, it imbues it with meaning by associating a cause to the smell. The information one garners from the odor (gender, health, etc.) is all part of the process of imbuing it with a reference to some state-of-affairs in the world (meaning).Scent-marking is an animal communication of territorial claim; perhaps it is intentional, or perhaps it is unconscious instinct, who knows. But it is meaningful and understandable to animals. It is hardly a language though, consisting of one smell-word - "me", though that word can itself be read into as to gender, dominance, and so on. — unenlightened
So, you're saying that metaphors are simply failing to use words right? When I looked up the word, "page" it doesn't include anything about "arguments", as in " We are not on the same page (you don't get my arguments)". If a word like, "page" can be used in a way that isn't defined in some dictionary and it still mean something, then anyone can use any word they want to express any idea they want. It would be up to the listener to get at the true meaning - which would what the speaker or writer intended to say.Now when you use the word "look" above, you presumably intend to convey something, in this case to direct the reader's attention. But the meaning of "look" does not at all depend on your intention.
We are on the same (web) page, just banana at the screen! Just banana at your metaphor... — Harry Christian
Harry C. here meant (intended) to say the same thing as you, but regardless of his intentions, "banana" does not mean "look". He simply failed to use the words aright. — unenlightened
Heh, more like deliberate obtuseness on the part of those that don't seem to get that any use of words (or any tool for that matter) is useless and meaningless without a goal-in-mind.This is the (probably deliberate) confusion you have been spreading though the thread, based on an equivocation between the intention of the speaker and the proper use of words. It is the same equivocation, incidentally that is is at the base of Humpty-Dumpty's declaration in Alice inWonderland: — unenlightened
Yes, thoughts are things too, which is why we can turn our thoughts on themselves - of thinking about thinking.Thoughts are things. Some thought is about stuff. Others are more simple in constitution and facilitate the very ability for our thinking about stuff. — creativesoul
You're neglecting to draw and maintain the crucial distinction between thinking and thinking about stuff. I suspect that you've also neglected to consider the difference between pre-linguistic thought and linguistic. I would even go as far as to guess that you also neglect to consider the difference between thought/belief and thinking about thought/belief.
You neglected to address the long answer, which argued for the short. Gratuitous assertions aren't acceptable. — creativesoul
How is it that when you simply use words but don't refer to anything with them, your words become useless and meaningless? — Harry Hindu
What I said is that you can use words, but if they don't refer to anything, then they are useless and meaningless. Yes, you can use a hammer in a way that it isn't designed, but if you have a goal-in-mind, then you are still using the hammer to accomplish a goal, which makes the hammer useful and meaningful to accomplish the goal. If you don't have a goal-in-mind, and you are just fiddling with the hammer, then that would be useless and meaningless, and you said it yourself, would still be using the hammer, but not with a goal-in-mind. Youg seem to be conflating "use" with "useful". You can use a tool, but if you don't have a goal-in-mind, then your using the tool is really useless.You said it yourself; if there is no use (words become useless) there is no meaning (words become meaningless).
You seem to be equivocating on the word 'use'. If you just utter a bunch of words as nonsense, you can say, in one sense that you are using them, but in another sense you are not using them at all. An analogy is that if you are fiddling with a hammer, you are not really using it in the way it was designed to be used. — John
That's what YOU said - that you can only know something by experience - which I thought you meant by directly experiencing something as opposed to reading or hearing about someone else's experience. It is you that are conflating knowing by experience and knowing by hearing or reading about someone else's experience.The issue of testimony doesn't change my point. Because for me to know (1) there must've been some scientists who did all the right experiments that confirmed it (knowledge doesn't come from nowhere). What's the alternative on your view? Do you want to say that we know all that stuff about DNA apriori and independently of scientific experiments and observations? — Fafner
Well no, the meaning of the sentence is not a picture - the sentence says that Bernie Sanders is the president (not that his picture exists), and this is what it means. Your view that all false sentences are meaningless is really just incredible. It follows that whenever you understand a sentence then you can know apriori that it is true (so I know what the sentence "I'm a millionaire" means therefore it is a proof that I am a millionaire etc.).
(Also, you describe the picture as a picture of Bernie Sanders being the president, so the picture does after all has meaning despite being false? Or is there another picture which it pictures etc...?) — Fafner
Well, yeah, it is the intent, or the goal-in-mind, that is the cause of the words being used.It's the same in the respect that there's an intent to deceive. — Terrapin Station
I don't get it. One thing is for sure is that when I deceive some one, I'm not referring to the thing I'm lying about as something else. I'm not referring to "yellow" as "blue". That's not how the deception develops in my mind. Instead I'm thinking about how they will behave based on what they know and what I don't want them to know, and replacing it with what I want them to know. The goal-in-mind is making them think this particular thought, NOT the other. We have a habit of putting ourselves in each other's head - of simulating other's thoughts. We are one of the few animals that can do this, and this is an ability that is required in order to deceive. Simply referring to something as something that it isn't in your own mind, isn't enough to deceive, nor is it the process that I follow when I deceive. I make a prediction of the victim acting in some way as a result of my projecting a false thought into their mind via language.You're both using "yellow" and "blue" to refer to the same colors. You're not actually using "blue" to refer to yellow. Because you're not thinking of "blue" as the name of "that color." You're thinking of "blue" as blue and also thinking, "I'm going to deceive this person so that they think these yellow bananas are blue." — Terrapin Station
How have you experienced every person on the world has a unique DNA fingerprint other than reading that to be the case by in a science journal or something like that? A lot of our knowledge is from reading books or watching documentaries, not by direct experience. Is what we read more wrong than what we subjectively experience and take as truth?Now, my point is that you can infer (3) from (2) only if you know that (1) is true, but you can't know it apriori since (1) is a hypotheses that could be known only via experience (it could've been false - it is false in the case of some insects for example). — Fafner
Sure, if the meaning of your words is to make me picture Bernie Sanders in the White House, even though he isn't. Your words refer to the image of Bernie being President.But it is meaningful. (I rest my case) — Fafner
Wrong. The goal is always in mind while using the tool. It is what keeps you using the tool, at least until the goal was accomplished. This is why we hate people who repeat themselves. We get the idea, shut up already.Neither the intention nor the goal is the act of hammering. Neither the intention nor the goal is the meaning of the word. — Michael
As I said, you wouldn't keep dancing if you didn't intend to keep dancing.An imagined dance isn't a dance. A dance is the movement of the body, not your intention or your goal. The meaning of a word is its use, not your intention or your goal. — Michael
If all we needed was a publicly accessible word catalog, then there would never be misunderstandings. When you don't understand what someone says or writes, it is the speaker or writer's intentions you aren't getting.The meaning of a word must be publicly accessible if we are to understand each other. Therefore the meaning of a word can't be your intention or your goal. — Michael
Yeah, like using a tool. You use a tool to accomplish a goal, which requires intent. Again, the tool is only part of the process so it would be wrong to say that the tool itself and how it is used is the meaning when the tool wouldn't be used at all if intent didn't precede the use.No, it's simply that it's a particular kind of use. — Michael
Wrong. You can dance anywhere you want - all you need is the intent. You can imagine you are dancing in your head.Perhaps, but the dance itself is the movement, not the intention. Dances happen on the dance floor, not in your head. — Michael
What is publicly accessible is the world we share and that is what we are talking about when we use language - or meaningful, useful words.And for me to understand what you're saying, it must be that the meaning of your words is publicly accessible. Your intentions aren't. We're not mind-readers. So for communication to work, meaning must be found in the things that we actually see and hear and feel. That you intend to achieve some end doesn't refute this. — Michael
Wrong. We establish causal relations all the time that we never experience, and we make good predictions from this knowledge often. What does a crime scene investigator do if not creating an explanation of causes of the effects of the crime scene - all without having been an eye-witness to the crime itself? This fingerprint along with this DNA means that this person was at the crime scene when it happened. We can predict behaviors of things we never experienced based on similarities with things of a similar kind.Meaning cannot be a causal relation. If X means Y because Y causes X (X being some mental state in our heads, or whatever you like), then you can't know that X means Y, since causality is something that can only be known through experience, but you cannot learn from experience that Y causes X, unless you already know the meaning of Y, so you get a circle here (in other words, you already need a language that can represent the causes of your mental states in order to know them, but if this is the case, then you cannot know what means what since knowing the causes of your representations requires a prior ability to represent them). — Fafner
How is "Bernie Sanders is the president of the united states" meaningful, or useful?This is simply not true. What about false sentences or negative truths? They don't 'refer' to any states of affair by their very nature. For example: "Bernie Sanders is the president of the united states" (the sentence is false but meaningful despite the non-existence of the state of affairs which it represents), and "Bernie Sanders in not the president of the united states" (which is true and meaningful, despite again the non-existence of the state of affairs which it describes). — Fafner
Was it something like (to use our banana example again) pointing at a banana and thinking that it's yellow, but saying, "That is blue"?
The thing there, though, is that you're not really personally using "blue" for that color. You're using "yellow" but just saying "blue" for whatever reason you've decided to say "blue" instead. (Maybe just for this example.) In other words, you're thinking "That's yellow but I'm going to say that it's blue"--thus you're using "yellow" for that color.
Now, someone who hears you will either say, "What? You're crazy, that's not blue! It's yellow"--further cementing that they're using "yellow" for that color. Or maybe it's a really young kid who doesn't know his/her color terms well yet. In which case they might start calling it "blue" instead.
None of that goes against meaning hinging on use, really. It's just that maybe you're trying to squeeze what counts or doesn't count as "use" into some unusually narrow idea. "Use" isn't normaly limited to "utterance." — Terrapin Station
If W. wasn't saying that then he must be implying that there is more to meaning than simply use. So maybe we shouldn't be calling it a "meaning is use" theory.This shows that you don't understand meaning-as-use. Wittgenstein wasn't saying that simply speaking any old sounds makes it the case that one has uttered meaningful words.
Dancing is just the movement of one's body, but that doesn't mean that any movement of one's body is a dance. — Michael
Yet, any movement of one's body IS a dance if one intends it to be a dance. Again, intention comes into play, as with using words. It is your intent that a listener or reader attempts to get at as the cause of their speaking or writing. Why are they saying what they are saying? What is it that they mean (intend)? We often use "mean" and "intend" interchangeably.Dancing is just the movement of one's body, but that doesn't mean that any movement of one's body is a dance. — Michael
I already quoted some passages from Wittgenstein where he gives an argument (especially the sections about the cube picture) against views like yours, but you however completely ignored that argument. — Fafner
