The definite article can be used for both the type and a token. For example:
"The blue whale is the largest mammal."
"The giraffe has a very long neck."
"The sensation is a tingling in the toes resulting from a lack of oxygen." — Luke
You said in the quote at the top of this post that "S" refers to a single token of the sensation. You have also argued previously that "a certain sensation" refers to a single token of the sensation. You are now arguing that neither the symbol "S" nor the word "sensation" can refer to the sensation. So which is it? Do "S" and/or "sensation" refer to a single token of the sensation or can they not refer to the sensation? — Luke
This is all you could possibly mean by saying that "S" and/or "the sensation" refer to a single token of the sensation. If there are two tokens, then you face the same contradiction that "one particular sensation is being referred to two different times". — Luke
To associate a "certain sensation" with a name/symbol is (supposedly in this scenario) to establish a type, not merely to name a single token. This has been my point. In the most basic terms, it is not logically possible to have the recurrence of a single token, which has only one instance, so Wittgenstein could only be referring to a type of sensation. — Luke
Let's suppose that Wittgenstein's use of "the sensation" is meant to single out a particular type, like in your examples, then unlike your examples he hasn't given anything to identify this particular type. — Metaphysician Undercover
So he is using "the sensation" to single out a particular type of sensation... — Metaphysician Undercover
...which supposedly has been identified, and made definite as his use of the definite article "the" indicates, yet the particular type has not been identified and made definite. Hence the ambiguity. — Metaphysician Undercover
71. One can say that the concept of a game is a concept with blurred
edges. — “But is a blurred concept a concept at all?” — Is a photograph
that is not sharp a picture of a person at all? Is it even always an advantage
to replace a picture that is not sharp by one that is? Isn’t one that
isn’t sharp often just what we need? — LW
But talking about it, unless the talk is aimed at discussing the identifiable features, does not remove the ambiguity (obscurity) as to what T is the name of. — Metaphysician Undercover
And in Wittgenstein's case, he doesn't even go so far as to say that "S" represents a type of thing. that is simply your assumption. At 261, he explicitly says we cannot make such a judgement. It is only you who is claiming that "S" names a type, as an attempt to remove the inherent ambiguity, and make the passage intelligible to you. — Metaphysician Undercover
You keep insisting that we cannot experience the same token twice — Metaphysician Undercover
"Recurrence" signifies another occurrence of the very same thing, a sort of repeating. — Metaphysician Undercover
The particular type has been identified - as "a certain sensation". What's your definition of "definite"? — Luke
So we can only ever talk about something if "the talk is aimed at discussing the identifiable features" of that something? — Luke
The purpose of all discussion about something is always to better define it? Go back to PI 71 - sometimes a blurry (or more general) picture is just what we need. — Luke
You're jumping to Wittgenstein's conclusion about the scenario at PI 261 here. I am (and we previously were) discussing the scenario at PI 258 itself. — Luke
If I've "insisted" anything, it's that you cannot experience the same token of a sensation (e.g. a pain) twice. — Luke
What do you think "occurrence" means? It need not have anything to do with "experience". Your experience of a chair is not the chair's occurrence. The chair's occurrence is its existence. The chair has one existence or instance, and thus there is one token of the chair. You can experience the chair's existence many times. Or zero times. There is still one token of the chair. — Luke
Definite: clear and distinct, not vague..
If you don't see "a certain sensation" as indefinite and ambiguous, I don't think I can help you to understand ambiguity. You need some elementary level training. Which sensation is he talking about? He's talking about a certain sensation. How does that identify the particular type of sensation referred to, making clear and distinct that type of sensation? — Metaphysician Undercover
We don’t know the boundaries because none have been drawn. To repeat, we can draw a boundary — for a special purpose. Does it take this to make the concept usable? Not at all! Except perhaps for that special purpose. No more than it took the definition: 1 pace = 75 cm to make the measure of length ‘one pace’ usable. And if you want to say “But still, before that it wasn’t an exact measure of length”, then I reply: all right, so it was an inexact one. — Though you still owe me a definition of exactness. — PI 69
And, as I've already explained to you it's nonsense to claim that there is such a thing as a token of a sensation. — Metaphysician Undercover
If there is no object called "the pain", which was being sensed, existing independently of the act of sensation, then the sensation would be completely imaginary. — Metaphysician Undercover
In terms of the type-token distinction, the type is “a certain sensation”.
How definite do you need him to be? What more information do you need and why do you need it?
Let’s assume that instead of “a certain sensation” Wittgenstein had said that the diarist has “a certain fruit”. Then you would complain that Wittgenstein was using the word “fruit” ambiguously because he does not tell us what type of fruit it is. And if he said it was an apple you would then complain that he doesn’t tell us what type of apple it is, etc. How far does Wittgenstein need to go before you are satisfied that he is no longer being ambiguous, vague, unclear or indefinite? . — Luke
There is nothing unclear in the first place about what he means by “fruit” or what he means by “sensation”. If there is, then you need to be more exact about what you mean by “definite” and tell us: At what level of detail does it stop being “indefinite” and become “definite”? Otherwise you face the same charge of “ambiguity” in your use of the word “definite”. — Luke
You’ll need to remind me why you think this is nonsense. — Luke
Okay, we sense sensations. What’s your point? — Luke
Luke, if he says "a certain type of fruit", then the type of fruit is left unidentified and this is ambiguous. If he says "a certain type of apple", then the type of apple is left unidentified and this is ambiguous. If he is saying "a certain type of sensation" then the type of sensation is left unidentified and this is ambiguous. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't believe you can be so persistent in your ignorance of Wittgenstein's use of "the". — Metaphysician Undercover
Sensations are not what is sensed. — Metaphysician Undercover
If there is no object called "the pain", which was being sensed, existing independently of the act of sensation, then the sensation would be completely imaginary. — Metaphysician Undercover
How definite do you need him to be? — Luke
Is pain not a sensation? Or can we not sense pain? Or both? You said: — Luke
Well, if he's talking about a particular item, or a particular type, referring to it as "the...", then this particular "something" ought to be identified. — Metaphysician Undercover
Of course the real ambiguity is as to whether he's talking about a particular object, or what you call a type, — Metaphysician Undercover
And it is quite possible that Wittgenstein is talking about a particular (or a particular type), and hiding the thing he is talking about from us, for the purpose of making a philosophical point, but then we must conclude that the ambiguity is intentional. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you refuse to acknowledge a difference between the thing sensed, and the sensation, then we simply cannot go any further in this philosophical discussion. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you apprehend a difference between the chair, as the thing sensed, and the sensation of the chair. — Metaphysician Undercover
Suppose we assign "pain" to the sensation itself. We still need a thing sensed, let's say the thing sensed is a wound, or an injury, what I'll call the source of the pain. — Metaphysician Undercover
Can we discuss Wittgenstein's so-called private language argument while maintaining this distinction, without conflating the two in ambiguity? — Metaphysician Undercover
Would you agree, that at 261, when he says "he has something", what the word "something" refers to here, is not the sensation, but the thing sensed, the source of the pain? — Metaphysician Undercover
Would you concur, that at 258 he is talking about the sensation itself, which we call "pain"... — Metaphysician Undercover
...but at 261 he switches and proceeds from this point onward to refer to the thing sensed (the source of the pain). — Metaphysician Undercover
The particular something is identified, as "a certain sensation". — Luke
Is that the real ambiguity? You keep saying that the type-token distinction is irrelevant here, except where it suits you to say that the type-token distinction is the main problem here. — Luke
The diarist is supposedly naming a type of "certain sensation" with the use of "S". This means that "S" is the type and its tokens are also called "S", being instances of the type. The "objects" of inner experiences can only be tokens or instances of the type "S". The type "S" cannot be an object, token or instance itself because it is only a conceptual category. — Luke
It seems that, in the case of pain, pain is both the thing sensed and the sensation. — Luke
"Something" doesn't refer to the source of the pain; it doesn't really refer to anything. — Luke
I would concur that at 258 he is talking about "a certain sensation", and, yes, the sensation itself. However, I would not agree that this sensation is "pain". Wittgenstein does not specify what type of sensation it is. — Luke
Uh-huh, just like I can identify a particular colour, as "a certain colour". It might be good for a guessing game, but not too good for philosophy — Metaphysician Undercover
But he has to give it some identity as an internal experience, to be able to even lay out his example, so he just calls it a sensation. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's why he asks at 261, what reason do we have for calling this a sensation. And the answer, eventually, is that it's a sensation because that's what it's called. — Metaphysician Undercover
The "thing sensed" is the wound, injury, or whatever it is which is the source of the pain. — Metaphysician Undercover
Wittgenstein explicitly says, "He has something", and this is what he means, that there is something which is being referred to. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you think you have to guess what "sensation" means then you have missed the surrounding context.
If you think it's necessary to guess what type of sensation he means, then you don't understand the purpose of Wittgenstein's remarks on private language.
— Luke
Saying that he identifies it as an internal experience shows that you know how he is using the word. — Luke
At 261 he questions calling "S" the sign for a sensation. There is no such “answer” given. — Luke
And what is our reason for calling "S" the name of a sensation here?
Perhaps the kind of way this sign is employed in this language-game,—
And why a "particular sensation," that is, the same one every time?
Well, aren't we supposing that we write "S" every time?
Regardless, you haven't explained what this has to do with the private language argument. — Luke
Actually, he says "And it would not help either to say...that when he writes “S” he has Something." — Luke
The question is what does "the sensation" refers to in the context of 258. — Metaphysician Undercover
Suppose I define "chair" as a seat for one person. Then I tell you that I have named a certain chair "C". And then I proceed to talk about "the chair" named C, without telling you any of its identifying features, only that it is a chair. How can you not see that there is ambiguity with respect to what "the chair named C" refers to. Suppose I asked you to bring me the chair named C, so I could sit on it, because it's my favourite chair. How would you know which chair is named C? — Metaphysician Undercover
Now, out of these many things called sensations, I have taken one and named it "S". Then he leaves it completely ambiguous (a guessing game if you will), as to which sensation is the one which he has named S. — Metaphysician Undercover
The answer is at 270... — Metaphysician Undercover
At 258, Wittgenstein leaves it ambiguous as to whether "the sensation" as an internal experience, refers to the sensation itself, or the source of the sensation (what I called the thing sensed), as both are internal in sensations like pain. — Metaphysician Undercover
At 261 he makes it clear, when he says all we can say is that he has something — Metaphysician Undercover
Otherwise we could not say that he has something, because he might have nothing, and be naming nothing with "S", i.e. using S randomly. — Metaphysician Undercover
So, as I explained in the other post, he makes a switch at 261, so that "S" refers to the object, the thing sensed, rather than the sensation itself, from this point onward. — Metaphysician Undercover
This "switch", is what allows his use of "S" to be justified, as explained at 265. — Metaphysician Undercover
Actually, he says "And it would not help either to say...that when he writes “S” he has Something."
— Luke
Right... So, it does not help, as a means of justification, to say that he must have "something". This is because we still do not know what it is which is referred to as "S", that was left ambiguous, and remains ambiguous. That it must be something does not justify that it is a sensation. And if it's nothing it's totally fictitious, and still not a sensation. — Metaphysician Undercover
The private language argument argues that a language understandable by only a single individual is incoherent — Wikipedia article 'Private language argument'
What Wittgenstein had in mind is a language conceived as necessarily comprehensible only to its single originator because the things which define its vocabulary are necessarily inaccessible to others.
Immediately after introducing the idea, Wittgenstein goes on to argue that there cannot be such a language. — SEP article 'Private Language'
Why do you need this question to be answered in the context of 258? — Luke
oes "C" have only a private use? No one else but the diarist is supposed to know what "S" refers to.
However, I know what "chair" refers to, because you have defined it as "a seat for one person". And I know what "sensation" refers to in Wittgenstein's scenario because he talks about it in the context of "inner experiences" and "pain". — Luke
The type of sensation that "S" refers to is irrelevant to Wittgenstein's point. "S" has a private use so you can imagine any type of sensation you like. It makes no difference. Moreover, Wittgenstein proceeds to establish that the diarist cannot rely on the public word "sensation", so "S" cannot name a sensation anyway. — Luke
He doesn't say "all we can say is that he has something." He says: "And it would not help either to say...that when he writes “S” he has Something."
That is, according to Wittgenstein at 261, we cannot say that the diarist has Something. — Luke
That is, according to Wittgenstein at 261, we cannot say that the diarist has Something. — Luke
We cannot say that he has something. Wittgenstein shows us that the diarist fails to establish a use of "S" by inwardly associating it with a particular sensation. — Luke
259. Are the rules of the private language impressions of rules?—
The balance on which impressions are weighed is not the impression
of a balance.
What is (further) explained at 265 is that the private use of "S" is not justified, since "justification consists in appealing to an independent authority." — Luke
Wittgenstein disallows the private use of "S" to name a sensation because "sensation" is "a word of our common language". But Wittgenstein also disallows "that when he writes "S" he has Something" for the same reason - because "has" and "something" are also words of our common (public) language. — Luke
You have misread if you think Wittgenstein allows the use of "S" to name Something, and you are wrong that what "S" refers to "must be something". The entire point is that a private language is not possible. — Luke
In other words, if we judge the ambiguity as intentional, then we conclude that the question of what the thing is which "the sensation called S" refers to, cannot be answered, as I explained to you already. Then to understand the meaning of the passage we need to determine what Wittgenstein intended to do with that ambiguity. — Metaphysician Undercover
"C" in my example has the same use as "S" has in Wittgenstein's example. The fact that you claim to know what "S" refers to in Wittgenstein's example, as "a sensation" — Metaphysician Undercover
258. Let’s imagine the following case. I want to keep a diary about the recurrence of a certain sensation. To this end I associate it with the sign “S” and write this sign in a calendar for every day on which I have the sensation. — PI 258
Remember, as I explained to you, 258 is not an example of a "private language" as you define it. — Metaphysician Undercover
...a language in which a person could write down or give voice to his inner experiences — his feelings, moods, and so on — for his own use...[where] The words of this language are to refer to what only the speaker can know — to his immediate private sensations. So another person cannot understand the language. — PI 243
What you propose, "so 'S' cannot name a sensation anyway", directly contradicts what Wittgenstein says in the example, that "S" is the sign for a sensation, therefore we must reject your proposal. The problem appears to be that you believe Wittgenstein is giving an example of a "private language", when he is not, because this is impossible, so you can only support your belief by contradicting what Wittgenstein actually wrote. Therefore your belief is incorrect. — Metaphysician Undercover
That is, according to Wittgenstein at 261, we cannot say that the diarist has Something.
— Luke
I believe you are misreading this. He is talking about justifying the use of the word "sensation" here. He is saying "it would not help", (in relation to the attempt to justify this use), to point out that when he writes "S" he has "something" which "S" refers to. This is simply due to the obvious, saying that it is "something" doesn't justify calling it a "sensation". — Metaphysician Undercover
What Wittgenstein claims, is that whatever criteria, or principles which the person applies in making the judgement of "S", they cannot be understood or described by words. This is the "private" part. — Metaphysician Undercover
It is simply the person's memory, and the application of "private" judgement which cannot be described in words, because we describe things in terms of rules, and this is not a matter of following rules. — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore you need to respect the fact that he is asking a question at 260, when he asks did the man make a note of "nothing". He is not stating that "S" signifies nothing. — Metaphysician Undercover
Don’t consider it a matter of course that a person is making a note of something when he makes a mark a say in a calendar. For a note has a function, and this “S” so far has none. — PI 260
The parameters of the example stipulate that "S" signifies something, so this would be contradictory. — Metaphysician Undercover
According to my translation, this is incorrect. What I have is "—But justification consists in appealing to something independent." — Metaphysician Undercover
Now, proceeding onward he is talking about justifying 'our' use of "sensation" to refer to what the diarist signifies with "S", not the diarist's use of "S". — Metaphysician Undercover
It is well established at 258, that the use of "S" cannot be justified. — Metaphysician Undercover
Since "sensation" is a word of public language (261), we need to justify that the thing which "S" refers to is a token (to use your word) of the type, sensation. — Metaphysician Undercover
He is saying that use of these public words needs to be justified, he is not disallowing them. — Metaphysician Undercover
Obviously the claim that he has "something" does not justify the claim that "the something" is a sensation. — Metaphysician Undercover
Whatever method the person employs when attaching the name to the thing is completely private, as not being a matter of following a rule, and so it is unintelligible to us. — Metaphysician Undercover
Next, Wittgenstein wants us to justify "sensation", that what he has is a sensation. — Metaphysician Undercover
For “sensation” is a word of our common language, which is not a language intelligible only to me. So the use of this word stands in need of a justification which everybody understands. — PI 261
That there is a sensation implies that there is something sensed, and like the example of the chair, the something sensed is the "something independent", which serves to justify the use of "sensation". — Metaphysician Undercover
You want to turn back on the premises of the demonstration, and deny the principle premise, saying that Wittgenstein disallows such a use. — Metaphysician Undercover
Once again, "sensation" is not ambiguous given the context, as it clearly refers to an "inner experience" such as pain. It doesn't seem sensible for it to have any other meaning. Only "S" or the type of sensation denoted by "S" might be considered ambiguous or vague. — Luke
What definition of a private language are you using? — Luke
258 is a kind of reductio ad absurdum, where Wittgenstein attempts to play along with the private language advocate only to show that their assumptions lead to an impossible conclusion. It is not Wittgenstein contradicting himself, but the idea of a private language contradicting itself. — Luke
He notes at 261 that "sensation" cannot be a word of a private language because it is "a word of our common language, which is not a language intelligible only to me." — Luke
When he goes on to say: "And it would not help either to say it need not be a sensation; that when he writes "S" he has Something," he is talking about "Something" as being a lesser claim than a "sensation". The private linguist may accept that "S" cannot refer to a sensation, as Wittgenstein notes, however he may try to respond that "S" could still refer to "something" (not nothing), even if it is does not refer to a sensation. Wittgenstein is saying that it would not help to make the lesser claim that "S" refers to "something" instead of a "sensation", either. This is because ""has" and "something" also belong to our common language". Just like "sensation", "something" is also "a word of our common language which is not a language intelligible only to me." — Luke
You appear to be considering it a matter of course that the person is making a note of something, despite what Wittgenstein says here. — Luke
At 258 Wittgenstein asks us to imagine that he keeps a diary about the recurrence of a certain sensation that he associates with the sign "S". He can only be talking about the diarist's use of "S" at 261. "What reason have we for calling "S" the sign for a sensation"… in the imagined scenario at 258? — Luke
If it is "well established at 258" that the use of "S" cannot be justified, then why would we need to justify the use of "S" at 261? — Luke
Wittgenstein poo poos the idea that the private linguist could have something (if not a sensation). But, assuming you are correct, what do you view as Wittgenstein's supposed reason for stating that "something" cannot be justified as a sensation? — Luke
Surely the private linguist has their own rule for the use of "S". Otherwise, how do they recognise the same thing as "S" again each time? How do they use "S" in the same manner each time? Surely the use of "S" is at least intelligible to the user of "S". If "S" denotes a different type of thing each time, what purpose could that possibly serve? — Luke
Perhaps "disallow" is not the right word, but Wittgenstein shows at 261 that "S" cannot refer to a sensation if "S" is supposed to have only a private use. — Luke
Good, we finally have agreement, "the sensation", referring to the particular sensation named "S" is ambiguous. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now we can ask whether this ambiguity is intentional or not. In any attempt to understand the meaning of an ambiguous passage of writing, it is necessary to determine whether the ambiguity is intentional or not. It seems obvious to me that in this case it is intentional, as it is meant to be this way for the purpose of the demonstration. Do you agree? — Metaphysician Undercover
What is being named with "S" is "a sensation", and "sensation" is a word of our common language. Therefore this is not an example of a private language — Metaphysician Undercover
So the example at 258 is already set up within the bounds of common language, to talk about something which is being referred to through the use of common language as a certain sensation. Therefore it is impossible that this is an example of a private language. — Metaphysician Undercover
Wittgenstein never says "'S' cannot refer to a sensation", nor is this implied. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think you need to pay closer attention to the subtleties of the demonstration. Notice that at 258, the author, Wittgenstein, is providing the first person perspective: — Metaphysician Undercover
We are no longer concerned with how the judgement is made whereby something is judged as fitting the name "S"... — Metaphysician Undercover
...we are concerned with whether the thing which has been given the name "S" qualifies as a "sensation". — Metaphysician Undercover
So the diarist has said at 258, 'I am naming something "S"', and naming this thing this way is his own little private language game. — Metaphysician Undercover
However, since the diarist has said that the thing named is a "sensation", and "sensation" is a word from a public game, then from the perspective of the people in that game, 'us', or 'we', the diarist needs to justify the assertion that the thing called "S" is a sensation. — Metaphysician Undercover
From the first person perspective, 258, it is stipulated that the diarist is making a note of something. That is a premise of the example, so it cannot be otherwise, and we cannot ignore this. — Metaphysician Undercover
"Sensation" is our word, in our language game, and if we want to allow "S" into our game, — Metaphysician Undercover
The key to understanding the demonstration, which you are not getting, is that when we switch to the perspective of the observers, 'we', it is not a question of whether his use of S is justified, it is a question of whether our use of "sensation", to refer to the thing which he has named S is justified. — Metaphysician Undercover
Wittgenstein poo poos the idea that the private linguist could have something (if not a sensation). But, assuming you are correct, what do you view as Wittgenstein's supposed reason for stating that "something" cannot be justified as a sensation?
— Luke
If I claim that I am using "S" to refer to a certain sensation, and you ask me to justify this claim, that the thing I am calling S is a sensation, how is proving that there is something which S refers to, justification for the claim that the thing is a sensation? — Metaphysician Undercover
No, the possibility of a private rule is denied by Wittgenstein — Metaphysician Undercover
So all these points you raise, are from Wittgenstein's perspective, unanswerable, and therefore ought not be asked in that way. — Metaphysician Undercover
So whatever means the diarist uses to judge the occurrence of a sensation as qualifying for the name "S", it cannot be a rule. — Metaphysician Undercover
We look for justification that S actually names a sensation. — Metaphysician Undercover
Perhaps "disallow" is not the right word, but Wittgenstein shows at 261 that "S" cannot refer to a sensation if "S" is supposed to have only a private use.
— Luke
This is not true. What is shown is that the diarist's claim 'S refers to a sensation' remains unjustified (i.e. no such thing as correct or incorrect use) so long as the use of "S" remains private. The problem though is that the diarist already steps outside the bounds of a "private language", by using "sensation" to say what "S" refers to, because "sensation" is a word of public language. So the diarist has already gone beyond private use with this claim. — Metaphysician Undercover
"Private use" and "private language" are two distinct things. — Metaphysician Undercover
It is "S" which supposedly refers to the sensation, not the sensation which refers to "S". — Luke
He tries his best at 258 to depict a private language scenario based on the assumptions of the private language advocate without it turning into a public language. He does not succeed, but that's the point. — Luke
What would be an example of a private language? — Luke
You already said this was denied at 258. Your position at 261 is that we are looking to justify that "sensation" fits what the person has. — Luke
How is what you said different to what I said? I said that "S" cannot refer to a sensation if "S" is supposed to have only a private use. You just repeated it back after saying it's not true. — Luke
That is how Wittgenstein dictates the example. There is "a certain sensation" which is signified with "S". Then Wittgenstein refers to this sensation as "the sensation". So, in the demonstration "the sensation" refers to a particular sensation which has been named with "S". You can't change the way the demonstration has been written just because you don't like it, or it's "not how English works" in your opinion. — Metaphysician Undercover
He does not "try his best at 258 to depict a private language scenario". He already knows that as impossible, so he is depicting something different. He is depicting a private game (though he doesn't call it a game) within the context of a public language. — Metaphysician Undercover
A true "private language" would require that the naming of the thing be private. — Metaphysician Undercover
...a language in which a person could write down or give voice to his inner experiences — his feelings, moods, and so on — for his own use...[where] The words of this language are to refer to what only the speaker can know — to his immediate private sensations. So another person cannot understand the language. — PI 243
Wittgenstein does not keep the naming of thing private, he only keeps the thing private. — Metaphysician Undercover
At 258, from the first person perspective, the use of "S" cannot be justified "there is no right here"; "I" can apply S to whatever I want. — Metaphysician Undercover
The first layer is naming something with "S". The second layer is the person claiming that the thing named as S is a sensation — Metaphysician Undercover
And it would not help either to say that it need not be a sensation; that when he writes “S” he has Something — and that is all that can be said. — PI 261
Consider that the person could be using "S" completely privately without knowing that "S" refers to something which we would call a "sensation". The use of "S" could be completely private, yet from our perspective, "S" refers to a sensation. That is the difference. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is not how Wittgenstein dictates the example. He associates "the recurrence of a certain sensation" with the sign "S" and writes the sign "S" in a calendar for every day on which he has the sensation. — Luke
What definition of a private language are you using? Earlier you said you agreed to Wittgenstein's description of a private language that he gives at 243: — Luke
We don't know what "S" refers to, so how is it not private? — Luke
If he applies it to whatever he wants, then he is not applying it only to his immediate private sensations, as per the description of a private language at 243. — Luke
So you're saying that it need not be a sensation; that when he writes "S" he has Something — and that is all that can be said? — Luke
This is not how Wittgenstein dictates the example. He associates "the recurrence of a certain sensation" with the sign "S" and writes the sign "S" in a calendar for every day on which he has the sensation.
— Luke
You are not grasping this correctly. — Metaphysician Undercover
He does not associate "the recurrence of a certain sensation" with the sign "S". — Metaphysician Undercover
I want to keep a diary about the recurrence of a certain sensation. To this end I associate it with the sign “S”... — PI 258
"The recurrence of a certain sensation" is a phrase of language. This is not what he marks with an "S" — Metaphysician Undercover
...and write this sign in a calendar for every day on which I have the sensation. — PI 258
He is telling us (publicly) about this activity of marking in the diary, with that phrase, and is calling it (the thing signified by S) "the sensation". — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore this phrase, "the recurrence of a certain sensation" refers to the thing he is signifying by marking with an "S", as does "the sensation", not vise versa. — Metaphysician Undercover
We don't know what "S" refers to, so how is it not private?
— Luke
It's not private because we have a public word which refers to the thing named "S", it is "sensation". But you can't seem to get the referencing right — Metaphysician Undercover
At 258, from the first person perspective, the use of "S" cannot be justified "there is no right here"; "I" can apply S to whatever I want.
— Metaphysician Undercover
If he applies it to whatever he wants, then he is not applying it only to his immediate private sensations, as per the description of a private language at 243.
— Luke
I know, it's not an example of a private language. How many times do I have to demonstrate this to you? — Metaphysician Undercover
Why would the person with the supposed private language be restricted only to naming private sensations with that language? — Metaphysician Undercover
If "private language" made any sort of sense we couldn't say that this language would be restricted by any conceptions imposed by the confines of our public language. It couldn't be restricted at all. But then how could it be a language? — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you agree that "S" is supposed to signify, or be "the name of" whatever it is which is described as recurring? — Metaphysician Undercover
He is talking about establishing a direct relationship between a name and a sensation, and that's what's meant, and described at 258, establishing a direct relationship between a sensation, and its name "S", by giving that sensation a name, "S". — Metaphysician Undercover
So, from the first person perspective which Wittgenstein provides us at 258, we have a recurring 'thing' (whether type or token is irrelevant here), we have "S" as the sign, or name of this thing, and we have the person referring to this thing as "the sensation", in telling us about the thing he has named "S". — Metaphysician Undercover
Do we have agreement on this, or not? — Metaphysician Undercover
Accordingly, discussion of our second principal disagreement, whether this is meant to be an example of "a private language" or not, is pointless until we have agreement as to what has been given to us in the example. — Metaphysician Undercover
...a language in which a person could write down or give voice to his inner experiences — his feelings, moods, and so on — for his own use...[where] The words of this language are to refer to what only the speaker can know — to his immediate private sensations. So another person cannot understand the language. — PI 243
I first want to observe that a definition of the sign cannot be formulated. — But all the same, I can give one to myself as a kind of ostensive definition! — How? Can I point to the sensation? — Not in the ordinary sense. But I speak, or write the sign down, and at the same time I concentrate my attention on the sensation — and so, as it were, point to it inwardly. — PI 258
Compare 243 with 258. He is clearly talking about the same thing here: — Luke
Ask yourself why a definition of the sign cannot be formulated. — Luke
Why would you say this, right after insisting that he is talking about a "sensation" at 258? When he talks about the private language at 243 he says "The words of this language are to refer to what only the speaker can know". — Metaphysician Undercover
But is it also conceivable that there be a language in which a person could write down or give voice to his inner experiences — his feelings, moods, and so on — for his own use? —– Well, can’t we do so in our ordinary language? — But that is not what I mean. The words of this language are to refer to what only the speaker can know — to his immediate private sensations. So another person cannot understand the language. — PI 243
Obviously "sensation" doesn't refer to something only he can know, and S is described as a sensation. — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore there is no real attempt at exemplifying a private language here. — Metaphysician Undercover
Nice cherry picking. Are you blind? How many times do I need to quote the passage from 243 before you comprehend that it contains the word "sensation"? Look: — Luke
No shit, Sherlock. But "sensation" is given as part of the description of a private language at 243 that you agreed to. Did you agree to that definition by mistake? — Luke
That's why he tries to provide an example of a private language and fails. — Luke
I don't see how the mention of "sensations" at 243 is relevant. The words of this proposed "private language" cannot be understood by another person. — Metaphysician Undercover
But is it also conceivable that there be a language in which a person could write down or give voice to his inner experiences — his feelings, moods, and so on — for his own use? ,,,
The words of this language are to refer to what only the speaker can know — to his immediate private sensations. — PI 243
The words of this proposed "private language" cannot be understood by another person. "Sensation" is not such a word. — Metaphysician Undercover
But "S" at 258 is said to be the name of a sensation. Therefore 258 is not an example of a private language. — Metaphysician Undercover
The description, or definition, of "private language", is not itself a private language. — Metaphysician Undercover
So "sensation" might be used in the definition of a private language, but since it is a publicly understood word, it cannot be part of a private language. This is very simple. Do you understand this? — Metaphysician Undercover
"S" is the new word with the private referent, and "sensation" is the public word. That the thing, if there even is a thing, which is named by "S", is consistent with the criteria of "sensation", must be justified. — Metaphysician Undercover
You cannot ignore these parts of 243: — Luke
You are ignoring everything here except "The words of this language are to refer to what only the speaker can know". How can you possibly think this gives you a better understanding of the text? — Luke
I agree. As I said, he tries and fails to provide an example of a private language according to the description he gives at 243 which includes the word "sensations". — Luke
Why is it only the word "sensation" that requires justification at 258? Why not all the other words too? What makes this word so special? — Luke
Does the "sensation" at 243 also require justification? And what is this process of justification? How are these words justified? Please answer these questions to help support your argument. — Luke
I'm not ignoring it, I'm just pointing out the insufficiency to you. — Metaphysician Undercover
I spent days arguing that we cannot know exactly what "S" refers to because of ambiguity — Metaphysician Undercover
It's basic logic. If a definition stipulates two requirements, then fulfilling one of the requirements is insufficient for designating that the thing meets the conditions of the definition. — Metaphysician Undercover
If this is the case, then you must concur that we cannot understand the meaning of S, as indicated by the description, or definition of "private language. — Metaphysician Undercover
We don't know what "S" refers to, so how is it not private? — Luke
It's not private because we have a public word which refers to the thing named "S", it is "sensation". — Metaphysician Undercover
Imagine that one wants to keep a diary about the recurrence of a certain sensation. This is, after all, something one might well want to do, perhaps for the sake of recollection in tranquillity (MS 116, 136) or for medical purposes (MS 119, 132v). And it is certainly something we can do. But now suppose that we conceive of doing so in accordance with the model of the putative ‘private’ language. So we think that to do so, one must associate the sensation with a sign, say ‘S’, and then simply write ‘S’ down on a calendar whenever one has a sensation. To show the incoherence of this conception is the purpose of §§258 — Baker and Hacker exegesis of §258
On this latter reading, §§258 and 270, for example, are attempts to give the interlocutor [i.e. the private language advocate] what he says he wants, but which, in the end, amount to nothing (in the case of 258) ...
However, to investigate the possibility of the imagined diary case by exploring it from the inside (the only way, he thinks, really to expose the confusions involved) requires him to use certain words when it is just the right to use these words which is in question. Thus he is forced to mention in §258 examples like ostensive definition, concentrating the attention, speaking, writing, remembering, believing and so on, in the very process of suggesting that none of these can really occur in the situation under consideration (§261). — SEP article 'Private Language'
There are not two conditions.
When he says "The words of this language are to refer to what only the speaker can know", the word "this" is indicative of the language he mentioned earlier, namely: "a language in which a person could write down or give voice to his inner experiences — his feelings, moods, and so on — for his own use". — Luke
All you have is misplaced condescension. — Luke
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