Directives are saying something about the state of affairs of the wants and needs of the person using sonecscribbles or sounds.Assertives, such as statements, descriptions, assertions.
Directives, such as orders, commands, requests.
Commissives, such as promises, vows, pledges.
Expressives, such as apologies, thanks, congratulations.
Declarations, in which we make something the case by declaring it to be the case. — Banno
Then Searle is not talking about language-use in the world. Hes talking about his own feelings about language-use.I'm afraid I don't see the relevance. Searle is not saying "this is how it must be", he's giving a (hopefully useful) account. A counterargument would be that it wasn't useful, not that alternative accounts are also plausible. — Isaac
Then Searle is not talking about language-use in the world. Hes talking about his own feelings about language-use.
So is this thread about language-use or Searle's feelings or views of language use? Is there any relationship between the two? — Harry Hindu
What would it mean for you to be wrong if there are many possible models?Of course he's talking about language use in the world. I could classify my books by author, subject, publication date, or binding colour. The choice is entirely mine, but the classification remains of the actual books and in each case I can be wrong about a particular book's placement within the scheme. — Isaac
Is Searle's model wrong? How would we know?Searle is modeling actual language use, but his is not the only possible model. — Isaac
Each makes something the case; that the couple are married, the ship named, the ownership of the watch passed on and the bet offered, if not accepted. — Banno
What would it mean for you to be wrong if there are many possible models? — Harry Hindu
Searle is modeling actual language use, but his is not the only possible model. — Isaac
Is Searle's model wrong? How would we know? — Harry Hindu
The distinctions Banno, by way of Searle, is making are useless when you understand that all language use is about a state-of-affairs (mental and physical states) in the world. — Harry Hindu
in a way closely analogous to the analysis of speech acts given above.S(p)
And in the same way, I propose that Declaratives by fiat create an external reality, in the world, while Suppositions by fiat create an internal reality, in the minds of the listeners. — hypericin
The words, alone, don't make something the case — Ciceronianus
The words, alone, don't make something the case (except perhaps in the case of the bet). Anyone may pronounce someone husband and wife, or name a ship something, or say they bequeath something to someone, and no marriage will result, nor would a ship be named, or a watch bequeathed. The officiant at the marriage must be authorized to marry others, the person naming the ship must be authorized to do so, the bequest must be enforceable under the law. — Ciceronianus
All stories might be preceded by the unspoken "in the story...", and so it becomes a declaration about a fictitious story. It is false that 'in the Lord of the Rings' Aragorn takes the ring to Mordor. — Isaac
While many if not most philosophers who discuss intentionality see desires and beliefs as central, for Searle it seems that the mental consists in conscious states, that are directed and hence intentional — Banno
The mind changes to match the world in perceptions, memories and beliefs, while the world is changed to match mind in actions, intentions and desires. — Banno
What, that we refer to the ratio with the sixteenth letter of the Greek alphabet? That's a geometric fact? — Isaac
If we are talking about the use of the symbol itself, that is also an assertion of convention:
"the ratio of the diameter of a circle to it's circumference is denoted by π" — hypericin
Declarations happen in the world: a naming assigns a name to a being or object. Suppositions on the other hand, happen purely in the mind, of the listener and speaker. — hypericin
:brow:What would it mean for you to be wrong if there are many possible models?
— Harry Hindu
Between models, utility, within models, it depends on the model. Usually they have criteria for correctness within them.
Is Searle's model wrong? How would we know?
— Harry Hindu
I find it useful, so no. I strongly suspect it wouldn't have made it this far is everybody thought it was useless, but in academia, stranger things have happened...
— Isaac
Searle is modeling language using language? Is an actual car a model of a car, or is it just a car? Seems like circular reasoning to me.Searle is modeling actual language use, but his is not the only possible model. — Isaac — Isaac
So you wouldn't be interested in knowing why your models are not useful to others? If they are not useful to others, then why would it be useful to you? Use is a manifestation of our goals. So if it is useful to you, but not useful to others, then you and others must have different goals, and therefore you would be talking past others.The distinctions Banno, by way of Searle, is making are useless when you understand that all language use is about a state-of-affairs (mental and physical states) in the world.
— Harry Hindu
It's not a matter of 'understanding that...'. You're just presenting a different model, and it's not for you to say what I, or others, find useful. — Isaac
Exactly. Yet your claim was that such assertions refer to objects in the external world. — Isaac
"External world" is not what I want. Rather, external to the speaker. — hypericin
Which seems of the same sort as "suppose there's a big green dragon..." — Isaac
Even if you declare that geometry is purely mental (I disagree, but I guess it is possible to argue), this theory does not intersect with the nature of the assertive speech acts which communicate it. — hypericin
the theoretical status of truth does not intersect with the everyday usage of the concept. — hypericin
I would have thought that, being a model, it would be wrong in that it does not represent what is being modeled, therefore it becomes useless as such. — Harry Hindu
Searle is modeling language using language? Is an actual car a model of a car, or is it just a car? Seems like circular reasoning to me. — Harry Hindu
So you wouldn't be interested in knowing why your models are not useful to others? — Harry Hindu
How so? I mean, it seems to me to intersect in the manner of christening of terms at the very least. You've not supported your assertion. — Isaac
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