Of course my instance of using "same" is not the same as Aristotle's, that's exactly the point, and it's quite obvious according to how "same" is defined by the law of identity — Metaphysician Undercover
Don't be absurd, this is the "same" which is defined by the law of identity. It was stated by Aristotle as a means of expelling sophism from philosophy. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think Witty talks about the origin of usage; — god must be atheist
usage is different from the origin of usage.
The origin of usage is using a word in a particular way, — god must be atheist
In my opinion Witty lacked the insight of accepting the status quo of language. He delved into apparent contradictions of language, and he conveniently ignored the social and cultural reconciliatory practices that eliminated the contradictions. — god must be atheist
It's a deficient "same" though. — Metaphysician Undercover
Is there a link between the context principle (CP) of Frege and the later Wittgenstein's language game (LG)? — TheMadFool
Wittgenstein's investigation of the logic of depiction has led him to a profound expression of a version of Frege's context principle: Only within a system of representation that stands in a projective relation to the world does a proposition have sense or a name meaning. — Marie McGinn. Elucidating the Tractatus: Wittgenstein's Early Philosophy of Language and Logic
Naming is not yet a move in a language-game — any more than putting a piece in its place on the board is a move in chess. One may say: with the mere naming of a thing, nothing has yet been done. Nor has it a name except in a game. This was what Frege meant too when he said that a word has a meaning only in the context of a sentence. — PI 49
You're preaching to the choir Luke. I'm not conflating information and meaning. Information is not meaning. — creativesoul
What I have not seen is a coherent explanation of exactly how information - which is already meaningful, lest there could be no translation/decoding - can be moved. — creativesoul
Information is meaningful. — creativesoul
Moving information may indeed occur, but is incidental to language. — Banno
I could go either of two ways: the first, call what is done with information the meaning of that information; the second, drop the notion of meaning altogether and just talk about information and its uses. — Banno
what since does it make to say that information(meaning) can be moved? — creativesoul
What I have not seen is a coherent explanation of exactly how information - which is already meaningful, lest there could be no translation/decoding - can be moved. — creativesoul
What I'm arguing would be closer to saying that moving information is not moving meaning or knowledge. That much more is involved. — Banno
Meh, I've realized I was dreaming before and recall even saying so "out loud" to a a dream person. — Marchesk
I cannot seriously suppose that I am at this moment dreaming. Someone who, dreaming says: “I am dreaming,” even if he speaks audibly in doing so, is no more right than if he said in his dream “it is raining,” while it was in fact raining. — On Certainty 676
I think you are right. I had not read the paragraph carefully enough — Fooloso4
it's a matter of determining the proper referent of "he" — Metaphysician Undercover
After all, I’d like you to say: “Yes, it’s true, one could imagine that too, that might happen too!” — But was I trying to draw someone’s attention to the fact that he is able to imagine that?
Rather I was trying to consider how the student might have looked at the series of numbers he wrote on the assumption that if we can understand how he looked at it we might be able to provide another way for him to look at it — Fooloso4
That by changing the way we look at a problem it can be resolved? — Fooloso4
Perhaps with this student it is, but I don't think Wittgenstein intends for this to be the end of the matter. I take the larger point to be that by changing the way we look at a problem the problem can be resolved. — Fooloso4
How does one have to look at it in order to continue? — Fooloso4
Sorry, to have to reiterate, but he doesn't say "we", he says "he", referring to the theoretical student — Metaphysician Undercover
69. How would we explain to someone what a game is? I think that we’d describe games to him
31. ...We may say: it only makes sense for someone to ask what something is called if he already knows how to make use of the name.
32. ...Augustine describes the learning of human language as if the child came into a foreign country and did not understand the language of the country; that is, as if he already had a language, only not this one.
And here we may imagine, for example, that he does copy the figures by himself, but not in the right order [...]
Or again, he makes ‘mistakes’ in the order. [...]
Or he makes a systematic mistake; — PI 143
After all, I’d like you to say: “Yes, it’s true, one could imagine that too, that might happen too!” — But was I trying to draw someone’s attention to the fact that he is able to imagine that? — PI 144
But was I trying to draw someone’s attention to the fact that he is able to imagine that?
But was I trying to draw the pupil's attention to the fact that the pupil is able to imagine that the pupil's ability to learn may come to an end here?
He is clearly talking about the pupil who's capacity to learn has come to an end, not the reader. — Metaphysician Undercover
W. is drawing our attention to a logical possibility, reminding us of a particular contingency, in order to reorient our way of looking at things. At what things? At the phenomena associated with understanding and meaning. He aims, in particular, at getting us to conceive of understanding quite differently from the way we are tempted to construe the concept: namely, as akin to an ability rather than as a mental state or process. If we compare understanding with abilities and think of manifestations of understanding as exercises of abilities rather than as causal consequences of inner states, we shall look quite differently at the phenomenon of sudden understanding, and also cease to conceive of understanding as a reservoir from which applications of understanding flow.
... that we do have certain elementary abilities (to imitate, react in standard ways, recognize shapes and colours, continue activities in a common pattern, etc.) is a general brute fact of human nature (cf. PI p. 56/48n.), which is crucial for our having the kind of language we have.
...understanding, misunderstanding and not understanding are distinguished by the difference between reacting correctly to training, making systematic mistakes, and making random mistakes.
But on the other hand, I also want to say that in all instances of what Witty would call 'everyday use', a picture, by virtue of it always being used in some manner or another (read: applied in some manner or another), is always-already a 'living' one, and that 'lifelessness' is always a derivative phenomenon, which happens when words are taken out of their everyday use. — StreetlightX
Do you think that the meaning of the words is distinct from the meaning of the act, using the words? — Metaphysician Undercover
One cannot escape the reality that intentional acts are meaningful — Metaphysician Undercover
It is only in normal cases that the use of a word is clearly laid out in advance for us; we know, are in no doubt, what we have to say in this or that case. The more abnormal the case, the more doubtful it becomes what we are to say.
And if things were quite different from what they actually are —– if there were, for instance, no characteristic expression of pain, of fear, of joy; if rule became exception, and exception
rule; or if both became phenomena of roughly equal frequency —– our normal language-games would thereby lose their point. — The procedure of putting a lump of cheese on a balance and fixing the price by the turn of the scale would lose its point if it frequently happened that such lumps suddenly grew or shrank with no obvious cause.
Therefore there is meaning here, despite the fact that I did not understand. — Metaphysician Undercover
