Words don't have an essence; — Cheshire
How so? My explanation is able to account, albeit only in a simple way, for the linguistic entity Wittgenstein calls family resemblance. — TheMadFool
I'm thinking about the context of poetry which couldn't exist without the open ability to manipulate words meanings subject to the other words that are surrounding them. — Cheshire
If I ever say this; then I guarantee what ever follows will be wrong.my explanation is the best one among others if such exist. — TheMadFool
Words don't have an essence;
— Cheshire
How so? My explanation is able to account, albeit only in a simple way, for the linguistic entity Wittgenstein calls family resemblance.
— TheMadFool
I'm thinking about the context of poetry which couldn't exist without the open ability to manipulate words meanings subject to the other words that are surrounding them.
— Cheshire
Ergo, the lack of essence allowed us the ability to assign words to things. Did we sit around guessing the animals name until we were presented with the essence sounding word for a goat? It isn't obvious if it is true. It is obvious if it is a goat; which is goatist falsification.
my explanation is the best one among others if such exist.
— TheMadFool
If I ever say this; then I guarantee what ever follows will be wrong. — Cheshire
I bet he would've said the family resemblance shouldn't figure in it i.e. it's preferrable that language isn't a game in which a given word's meaning alters with context (form of life). — TheMadFool
Let me stop you right there. I'm going to read the rest but this is a full stop in itself. Ideal qualifying language outside of a Russian lease agreement is frankly an upsetting term. Alright, I'll give the rest due diligence and respond tomorrow.We must make a distinction between how language is (ordinary language) and how language should be (ideal language). — TheMadFool
....were we to ask him about his views on an ideal language... — TheMadFool
We must make a distinction between how language is (ordinary language) and how language should be (ideal language). — TheMadFool
I bet he would've said the family resemblance shouldn't figure in it i.e. it's preferrable that language isn't a game in which a given word's meaning alters with context (form of life).
— TheMadFool
He literally says that this is exactly what we shouldn't do. But sure, continue making shit up — StreetlightX
Let me stop you right there. I'm going to read the rest but this is a full stop in itself. Ideal qualifying language outside of a Russian lease agreement is frankly an upsetting term. Alright, I'll give the rest due diligence and respond tomorrow. — Cheshire
Tell me, what do yo think the tractatus was?
Small steps. At least read a tertiary text about him before you say anything else. — Banno
To put differently what has already been said by others: the part of Wittgenstein's philosophy that you're looking at is built on a rejection of the search for an ideal language, so what you're doing is arguing against his whole approach. In principle that's fine, of course, but it's good to be clear about it.
By the way, the idea of a "misuse" in his later work is to show, not people need to work on improving language--which it seems to me is your own takeaway--but that philosophers have to pay attention to how language actually works. — jamalrob
It's a common misunderstanding that Witty is an advocate for 'vagueness' or somesuch — StreetlightX
In every case it must be asked: does that word fulfil its purpose? And if so, it's exact as it can be. — StreetlightX
He was an aeronautical engineer and his position was validated by Russell at least initially. If you want to keep running backwards in this corn field then by all means.Wittgenstein himself didn't read any books I'm told. Also, please go through my reply to StreetlightX. — TheMadFool
You must understand what it must be like as a philosopher which Wittgenstein was to come to the realization, discover, that people have been misusing, some would even go so far as to say abusing, language in ways that makes philosophy hard and even sometimes impossible (no essence, no philosophy :grin: ).
Attempting a bit of psychology since it seems to be a hot topic on the forum lately, Wittgenstein was actually complaining about the misuse/abuse of language rather than anything fundamentally important about the connection between language and philosophy. He wasn't aware of it of course. A pity.
My interepretation of Wittgenstein is that yes, he was onto something - that 1. words lack an essence and 2. many issues that philosophers are racking their brains over are pseudo-problems.
1 is undeniably true but not necessarily because something's wrong with either the tool (language) or with the material (philosophy). Our beloved Wittgenstein seems to have completely missed another likelier culprit, us, the end user of language (human error) - misuse/abuse of lingo/tongue/language.
2 is also true because language has been so poorly wielded that people have f**ked up and f**ked up bad.
So, ultimately, in the finaly analysis, Wittgenstein detected the problem (words seem to lack an essence) alright but he then goes on to claim that (some) philosophical problems aren't real which, to my reckoning, is a grave error because it presupposes people aren't misusing/abusing language which they are.
Think of it, every time Wittgenstein dismisses a philosophical problem as a pseudo-problem, we can respond by saying that people have used the relevant words in the wrong way and since Wittgenstein's entire theory of language games is predicated on that being false we have successfully demonstrated that there are real philosophical problems not pseudo-problems. — TheMadFool
He was an aeronautical engineer and his position was validated by Russell at least initially. If you want to keep running backwards in this corn field then by all means. — Cheshire
None of this has anything to do with your made up assertions about family resemblance or ideal languages. — StreetlightX
Kindly read my post just above. Thanks. — TheMadFool
If "meaning is use", the concept of misuse is N/A and anything goes — TheMadFool
That 'anything goes' does not follow. The full expression of 'meaning is use' is 'meaning is use in a language-game'. "Misuse" is what follows when meaning is not used in a language-game. This is Wittgenstein 101. — StreetlightX
They are, FYI, precisely what I refer to when I say anything goes. — TheMadFool
However, if "meaning is use", there can be no such thing as misuse/abuse of language. In the book analogy above a book can be anything at all i.e. we can use it for anything and everything and no one would/could say I've misused/abused the book. In terms of words, I'm free to say the word "water" is, intriguingly, fire and that "god" means devil. You couldn't object to this because the notion of word misuse/abuse is N/A. This is taking Wittgenstein's theory taken to its logical conclusion, if you plant Wittgenstein in your garden and tend to it with care and love a particulalry exotic flower will bloom. What is this flower? Total chaos, utter confusion of course. — TheMadFool
They are, FYI, precisely what I refer to when I say anything goes.
— TheMadFool
Then you have no idea what you are talking about. — StreetlightX
the word "game" (Wittgenstein's favorite) couldn't be applies to chess, battle simulations (war games) and sports - there's nothing that unites these three thematically to permit the use of the same word for all. — TheMadFool
If there were such a thing as misuse of language, the word "game" (Wittgenstein's favorite) couldn't be applies to chess, battle simulations (war games) and sports — TheMadFool
This simply means, to my reckoning, that words definitely do possess an essence but due to the fact, as herein described, that they're being (mis)used with complete disregard of definitional criteria (OR instead of AND) it creates an illusion of an absence of essence which Wittgenstein falsely believes is real (Language games/family resemblance). — TheMadFool
Misuse happens precisely when one treats the word 'game' as univocal across all these cases. 'Misuse' is what happens when you transplant words from one language-game into another without paying attention to the specificity of each. Of course Wittgenstein did not speak of 'misuse', but simply, a lack of use tout court. The idling engine of language. — StreetlightX
Wittgenstein's theory of language games makes sense only if 2 (above) doesn't count as misuse — TheMadFool
You're so obsessed with this notion of 'misuse' that you completely overlook the fact of no use: language which has no language-game at all, or an employment of language which, although mistaken for a use, does not have one. Your convoluted rambling misses the mark. — StreetlightX
No point discussing words that are no use, right? — TheMadFool
Your thread is one such instance and apparently it's gone on for two pages, so you tell me. Figuratively speaking. — StreetlightX
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