He was attracted by the idea that beliefs of all sorts were best understood in terms of their consequences. He called this “pragmatism,” following the American philosopher C. S. Peirce, who died in 1914. Ramsey took the essence of pragmatism to be that “the meaning of a sentence is to be defined by reference to the actions to which asserting it would lead, or, more vaguely still, by its possible causes and effects. Of this I feel certain.” Part of “the essence of any belief,” he later wrote, is that “we deduce from it, and act on it in a certain way.” — Frank Ramsey (mostly)
displaying the behaviorism of pragmatism and psychologism of the latter Wittgenstein. — Shawn
What do any of you think about pragmatism as the consequences of the meaning of a sentence. — Shawn
One thing we might be trying to do is to convey some state of mind from us to someone else, — Pfhorrest
What sort of thing is a state of mind? — Banno
states of mind can best be analyzed by their role in our functionality: what difference does being in this or that state of mind make on how we behave in response to what experiences? — Pfhorrest
as if language were no more than a system of roads along which we might transfer and trade the commodities of our intellect. — Banno
One thing we might be trying to do is to convey some state of mind — Pfhorrest
But the image is of a state of mind being moved form one head to another.
And as soon as you say it you know its wrong. — Banno
Pragmatism says the meaning of a sentence is to be defined by reference to the actions to which asserting it would lead, or its possible causes and effects. Wittgenstein says that to understand language we ought forget about meaning and look at what is being done in our actual use of words. It's a subtle, but profound, difference — Banno
Pragmatists generally reject the notion of truth outright and talk in terms of improved utility over time asymptotically approaching something that they deny exists. — Banno
On a side note, I'm puzzled by your use of "intensional" in the title - intensional as opposed to extensional; not intentional as opposed to accidental. Seems to me that pragmatism rests on extensional results rather than intensional results; is your point that pragmatism denies the intensional? — Banno
The image is a figurative one, — Pfhorrest
Better to take on a perspective of language use as building stuff with other people. — Banno
On a side note, I'm puzzled by your use of "intensional" in the title - intensional as opposed to extensional; not intentional as opposed to accidental. Seems to me that pragmatism rests on extensional results rather than intensional results; is your point that pragmatism denies the intensional? — Banno
But how would you construe one person making an assertion to another person as “building something together”? — Pfhorrest
Well, you might agree that at least you and I are building a thread. Perhaps even a conversation? An argument? — Banno
And this is not based ... on a transfer of information — Banno
nor on a notion of meaning as a subjective, indeed private entity. — Banno
Would you deny that any information has been transferred? — Pfhorrest
An odd retort. as isBut is a posted sign or a public announcement over loudspeaker meaningless because there is no opportunity to talk back? — Pfhorrest
If the meaning of a word is best replaced by an examination of use, then of course there is no single publicly agreed upon meaning.Do you deny that speakers of the nominally same language can mean different things by the same public symbols of the language, or take the same symbols to mean different things? — Pfhorrest
if language is seen as mere conveying some state of mind from one person to someone else. — Banno
But is a posted sign or a public announcement over loudspeaker meaningless because there is no opportunity to talk back?
— Pfhorrest
An odd retort. — Banno
If the meaning of a word is best replaced by an examination of use, then of course there is no single publicly agreed upon meaning. — Banno
But what then are the different, not-publicly-agreed upon meanings that different people try to use, if not private ones, which you seemed to dismiss? — Pfhorrest
Harlem
BY LANGSTON HUGHES
What happens to a dream deferred?
Does it dry up
like a raisin in the sun?
Or fester like a sore—
And then run?
Does it stink like rotten meat?
Or crust and sugar over—
like a syrupy sweet?
Maybe it just sags
like a heavy load.
Or does it explode?
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.