• plaque flag
    2.7k
    "We never know [exactly] what we are talking about." As I make out the situation, this is to be inferred from any structuralist semantics. The traditional and still dominant (?) view is well presented here:

    Spoken words are the symbols of mental experience and written words are the symbols of spoken words. Just as all men have not the same writing, so all men have not the same speech sounds, but the mental experiences, which these directly symbolize, are the same for all, as also are those things of which our experiences are the images. This matter has, however, been discussed in my treatise about the soul, for it belongs to an investigation distinct from that which lies before us. — Aristotle

    To me there's some irony in the ambiguity of 'mental experiences' which are presumably private and yet certainly (?) 'the same for all.' Note that the speech sounds directly symbolize the mental experiences. What can this phrase mean ? At the very least, I think we can infer a one-to-one mapping.
    It seems to me that this prejudice or assumption is a contender at least for the greatest cause of philosophical confusion of all time.

    Here's a taste of the opposite approach:

    If the meaning of the sign (roughly, that which is of importance about the sign) is an image built up in our minds when we see or hear the sign, then first let us adopt the method we just described of replacing this mental image by seeing some sort of outward object, e.g. a painted or modelled image. Then why should the written sign plus this painted image be alive if the written sign alone was dead? – In fact, as soon as you think of replacing the mental image by, say, a painted one, and as soon as the image thereby loses its occult character, it ceases to seem to impart any life to the sentence at all. (It was in fact just the occult character of the mental process which you needed for your purposes.)

    The mistake we are liable to make could be expressed thus: We are looking for the use of a sign, but we look for it as though it were an object co-existing with the sign. (One of the reasons for this mistake is again that we are looking for a “thing corresponding to a substantive.”)

    The sign (the sentence) gets its significance from the system of signs, from the language to which it belongs. Roughly: understanding a sentence means understanding a language.

    As a part of the system of language, one may say “the sentence has life”. But one is tempted to imagine that which gives the sentence life as something in an occult sphere, accompanying the sentence. But whatever would accompany it would for us just be another sign.
    — Wittgenstein
    ...in the language (that is, a language state) there are only differences. Difference implies to our mind two positive terms between which the difference is established. But the paradox is that: In the language, there are only differences, without positive terms. That is the paradoxical truth. At least, there are only differences if you are speaking either of meanings, or of signified or signifying elements.

    When you come to the terms themselves, resulting from relations between signifying and signified elements you can speak of oppositions.

    Strictly speaking there are no signs but differences between signs.
    ...
    You can never find the meaning of a word by considering only the exchangeable item, but you have to compare the similar series of comparable words. You cannot take words in isolation.

    The value of a word can never be determined except by the contribution of coexisting terms which delimit it: or, to insist on the paradox already mentioned: what is in the word is only ever determined by the contribution of what exists around it. ... Around it syntagmatically or around it associatively.

    You must approach the word from outside by starting from the system and coexisting terms.
    ...
    There are no positive ideas given, and there are no determinate acoustic signs that are independent of ideas. Thanks to the fact that the differences are mutually dependent, we shall get something looking like positive terms through the matching of a certain difference of ideas with a certain difference in signs. We shall then be able to speak of the opposition of terms and so not claim that there are only differences (because of this positive element in the combination).

    In the end, the principle it comes down to is the fundamental principle of the arbitrariness of the sign.

    It is only through the differences between signs that it will be possible to give them a function, a value.

    If the sign were not arbitrary, one would not be able to say that in the language there are only differences.
    — Saussure
    https://www.marxists.org/reference/subject/philosophy/works/fr/saussure.htm

    If one ends up convinced that signs get their meaning from their relationships with other signs, then one ends up suspicious about terms like 'consciousness' and 'being' and 'qualia.' It's not a simple matter of denial. It's rather a sense that people don't know what they are talking about, and (often enough) they don't know that they don't know what they are talking about. A certain kind of philosophy is that within us that resists bothood.

    Idle talk is the possibility of understanding everything without any previous appropriation of the matter. Idle talk, which everyone can snatch up, not only divests us of the task of genuine understanding, but develops an indifferent intelligibility for which nothing is closed off any longer. — Heidegger

    What is “familiarly known” is not properly known, just for the reason that it is “familiar”. When engaged in the process of knowing, it is the commonest form of self-deception, and a deception of other people as well, to assume something to be familiar, and give assent to it on that very account. Knowledge of that sort, with all its talk, never gets from the spot, but has no idea that this is the case. Subject and object, and so on, God, nature, understanding, sensibility, etc., are uncritically presupposed as familiar and something valid, and become fixed points from which to start and to which to return. The process of knowing flits between these secure points, and in consequence goes on merely along the surface. — Hegel

    Socrates and a certain kind of philosophy can be understood as making darkness visible, destabilizing our complacent parroting of educated common sense. (Perhaps Jesus helps us question the Resentment Industrial Complex.)

    Personally I'd like to know if anyone else has been struck with a strong sense of just how foggy sense tends to be. What does this kind of thinking mean for the question of the meaning of being ? It seems that every 'master word' is threatened by the structuralist insight.
  • plaque flag
    2.7k
    Wittgenstein once wrote something like this. How can I know what you are thinking when I only have access to the signs in your talk? Here comes the answer put as another question: How can I know what I'm thinking since I too only have access to my signs or words? And in Zettel, § 140: "Ever and again comes the thought that what we see of a sign is only the outside of something within, in which the real operations of sense and meaning go on". But there is no outside hiding something. There are no meaningbodies – "Bedeutungskörper" – parallelling our expressions or signs.

    One different kind of parallel does come to mind. Equivalence classes of expressions that have approximately the same function might serve to explain translation. "Find Y in language B that serves (basically, close enough) the same purpose as X in language A." Even in the same language, one can be asked to "translate" a philosophical thought, for instance. So "what do you mean?" is like "can you say that (the 'same' thing) in a different way?"
  • plaque flag
    2.7k
    It seems to me that the default view, which hides in the background, has to be dragged into the light in order to be recognized as a functioning and hobbling prejudice. Derrida's criticism of phonocentrism can be use more generally to criticize a certain conception of signs and words in general.

    The feelings of the mind, expressing things naturally, constitute a sort of universal language which can then efface itself.

    I take these to be 'godgiven' concepts, glowing identically from a single eternity for a inner eye that makes the human truly human. Softer versions of this might acknowledge that it takes time for the soul to remember its inheritance, with the help of a semantic midwife perhaps.

    In every case, the voice is closest to the signified, whether it is determined strictly as sense ( thought or lived ) or more loosely as thing. All signifiers, and first and foremost the written signifier, are derivative with regard to what would wed the voice indissolubly to the mind or to the thought of the signified sense...

    Is the voice truly so central here ? Or is it the interactive physical presence of the teacher ? How about an adept and a novice who only use sign language ? Compared to an autodidact who only uses sound recordings ? The temptation is to create a triangle of speech, writing, idea. Both speech and writing are thought of as clothing or husk. To be fair, there is still something seemingly immaterial even in equivalence classes. Or is there?


    ...absolute proximity of voice and being, of voice and the meaning of being, of voice and the ideality of meaning.We already have a foreboding that phonocentrism merges with...the meaning of being in general as presence...

    To me this gets us back to the difficulty of talking about being and ideality and consciousness by means of a structural organ. Maybe we dodge this embarrassing situation by taking on faith or as an axiom what's being dragged into the light here. "Just as all men have not the same writing, so all men have not the same speech sounds, but the mental experiences, which these directly symbolize, are the same for all..." The sign is understood to be like a coin, with a conventional public face, conventionally established, and a profoundly private and yet necessarily shared internal face. "As the face of pure intelligibility, it refers to an absolute logos to which it is immediately united. This absolute logos was an infinite creative subjectivity in medieval theology : the intelligible face of the sign remains turned toward the word and the face of God."
  • Moliere
    4.7k
    Personally I'd like to know if anyone else has been struck with a strong sense of just how foggy sense tends to be.green flag

    Present.

    :)

    All I know is that they mean with guesses at what they mean -- I certainly don't know how they mean, and at times doubt that they mean but immediately recant as the expression makes sense in the moment of the saying.
  • plaque flag
    2.7k

    Could you say more ? I've always had trouble (ain't it ironic?) feeling understood on this issue. It'd be great to wring out some solidarity.
  • Moliere
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    Well, I can try! I don't think meaning is an easy subject to discuss. Some difficulties:

    It has a self-referential quality -- what we say is an example of the phenomenon being explored, and so in the act we can make new examples that break old rules, even the rules that we may supply ourselves.

    Presuming rules even matter in the matter of meaning, which seems doubtful but it's a place to begin.

    And this is true even if we don't find counter-examples in a given discussion -- given that language has an infinite number of possible iterations, one might even predict that every theory of meaning has a counter-example, and the successful theories of meaning are theories for which we haven't found the counter-examples yet ;).

    And in the midst of deliberation, we could claim that a given sentence is "meaningless", so it doesn't count against a theory of meaning. (it's easy to find ways to "save" a pet theory of meaning)

    Then there's the possibility of undermining ourselves in the same manner that we might be suspicious of:

    If one ends up convinced that signs get their meaning from their relationships with other signs, then one ends up suspicious about terms like 'consciousness' and 'being' and 'qualia.' It's not a simple matter of denial. It's rather a sense that people don't know what they are talking about, and (often enough) they don't know that they don't know what they are talking about.green flag

    If it's possible for others to not know that they do not know, how can I know that I do know? Especially when meaning seemed so simple and easy this whole time, almost as if it were given, and now it seems impossible to determine?


    Which says a lot about my doubts and difficulties. Maybe that'll be enough to the task of feeling like we understand one another :) -- though it certainly didn't help in answering the question of meaning.
  • plaque flag
    2.7k
    It has a self-referential quality -- what we say is an example of the phenomenon being explored, and so in the act we can make new examples that break old rules, even the rules that we may supply ourselves.Moliere

    :up:

    Good point. Philosophy seems to me like exactly that kind of self-referential insanity, the cat trying to catch its tail.

    It seems to me that we could clarify the word 'meaning' forever. And we can only send strings of words to do so. And that's how the glorious bots see the world, only as a chains of words. I know that there is a something more than language in human existence, but how the chains of words refer is not so clear...
  • plaque flag
    2.7k
    If it's possible for others to not know that they do not know, how can I know that I do know? Especially when meaning seemed so simple and easy this whole time, almost as if it were given, and now it seems impossible to determine?Moliere

    I don't think we ever know exactly what we mean, which means I don't know exactly what I mean when I say that. But if I keep trading strings of words with you, we might both walk away with a sense that we are in on a blurry but significant realization together. I'd call this a phenomenon. It's beyond the external/internal talk. It's there in the lifeworld to be noticed, foregrounded with the right string of words.
  • plaque flag
    2.7k
    And in the midst of deliberation, we could claim that a given sentence is "meaningless", so it doesn't count against a theory of meaning. (it's easy to find ways to "save" a pet theory of meaning)Moliere

    Yes. It's all too easy to cheat and make excuses. Old fashioned virtues like honesty and courage have no small place here. We've got to be willing to suffer wounds .... which is probably made possible because identity is not too invested in this or that theory but rather in the image of the self as courageous and honest and willing to let its pet theories die. So a higher and better narcissism, which is open to all members willing to follow the rules, tames a lesser, lonelier kind.

    It's as if philosophers share the same ego ideal of honest courage that tarries with the negative in the name of the positive.
  • plaque flag
    2.7k
    While structuralism suggests one kind of ambiguity, metaphoricity suggests another. In short, we are savages trading hieroglyphics.

    Lakoff and Hofstadter both write that cognition is metaphorical, but the idea is older. In the narrower context of metaphysics, Anatole France had a character make the case.

    I was thinking how the Metaphysicians, when they make a language for themselves, are like … knife-grinders, who instead of knives and scissors, should put medals and coins to the grindstone to efface … the value… When they have worked away till nothing is visible in these crown pieces, neither King Edward, the Emperor William, nor the Republic, they say: ‘These pieces have nothing either English, German, or French about them; we have freed them from all limits of time and space; they are not worth five shillings any more ; they are of inestimable value, and their exchange value is extended indefinitely. — Garden of Epicurus by Anatole France

    The idea is to examine metaphysical terms etymologically and find the original metaphors. Ideas turn out to be images. The soul turns out to be breath. And so on. The referee blows her whistle at this point, because we are on the verge of the etymological fallacy. Or are we ? Once 'image' is used enough in a new way, a new 'concept' is indeed created (perhaps as this new way of using an old word.) So the 'hieroglyphic' for image is now understood to refer to something like a FORM. In the same way, the word 'breath' can lose its association with lungs and air and become consciousness or the subject.

    Metaphysical words aren't meaningless, but their status is strange. They float over an abyss, one might say. How is their meaning to be grounded ? If it all ?

    The critique of phonocentrism also detaches (elusively pure) "meaning" from the voice. If what is poured in the ear is mostly signs evoking images, we like to drink our hieroglyphs with the mouths on the side of our face.
  • Moliere
    4.7k
    Metaphysical words aren't meaningless, but their status is strange. They float over an abyss, one might say. How is their meaning to be grounded ? If it all ?green flag

    Is "grounded" the right relationship to seek? And if so, what even is grounding?

    I usually just take meaning as basic. Being a competent speaker of a language means knowing meanings, and we seem able to use English. It's us that knows what words mean. In fact, sometimes we're even something like the gods of meaning, creating words ex nihilo -- a strike against the structuralists.

    The critique of phonocentrism also detaches (elusively pure) "meaning" from the voice. If what is poured in the ear is mostly signs evoking images, we like to drink our hieroglyphs with the mouths on the side of our face.green flag

    Derrida is in the back of my mind. In particular there's a difference between the meaning of the sign, or writing in the small sense, and meaning, or writing in the large sense. Writing can be taken as primary to speech, where speech is phono-centric writing.

    At which point -- how do we know what the sign is? Isn't it that which is always-already meaningful?

    And if everything is text, writing in the large sense, that too is meaningful. Meaning overflows our signs. Writing is a chasing after, a drawing a trace within a meaningful world using the pen we all have, our body -- in whatever capacity.

    Which goes further to highlight how difficult it is to come up with a general notion of the sign. Even those without writing in the small sense manage to communicate meaning in the large sense. What could a sign possibly be, given how widespread meaning is in this set up?
  • plaque flag
    2.7k
    Is "grounded" the right relationship to seek? And if so, what even is grounding?Moliere

    Beautiful question. Because 'ground' is a metaphor. We want our feet on the ground.

    But perhaps we could talk of them hanging from the ceiling ?

    I usually just take meaning as basic. Being a competent speaker of a language means knowing meanings, and we seem able to use English.Moliere

    But we are back to grounds and foundations this way :

    'Basic' => 'base '= > "bottom of anything considered as its support, foundation, pedestal"
    https://www.etymonline.com/word/BASIC

    Is taking meaning as basic a kind of platonism ? Are meanings 'basically' forms ?

    I don't dispute our practical skill with the language and the way we glide glide glide.
  • plaque flag
    2.7k
    how do we know what the sign is? Isn't it that which is always-already meaningful?Moliere

    That sounds right, but how do we define 'meaningful' ? That which signifies ? Is the sign "that ill-named thing, the only one, that escapes the instituting question of philosophy...what is it?" ?

    To me something like being-in-the-world-together-with-language is an unbreakable unity. If you try to break it, you end up talking nonsense.
  • plaque flag
    2.7k
    Writing is a chasing afterMoliere

    Yes! I agree. Philosophy is that chase. The chase for clarity ? Power ? Beauty ? Novelty ?

    We leap from stone to stone, from sign to sign, trying to say it.

    Trying to say what saying is ?
  • plaque flag
    2.7k
    Writing can be taken as primary to speech, where speech is phono-centric writing.Moliere

    Right. And if metaphors are central and mostly visual, then our talk aimed at the ear is nevertheless hieroglyphic and aimed at the inner or spiritual eye. Now I'm an atheist, so this spiritual eye is an organ for geist or culture or symbol interpretation. Given that the etymological fallacy is indeed a fallacy, what is the strange process of metaphors being 'lifted up' or transfigured so that they bear metaphysical import thereafter ? How does breath become spirit ? How does dirt become primordiality or the apriori ? How does image become trans-ocular form ?
  • Moliere
    4.7k
    Is taking meaning as basic a kind of platonism ? Are meanings 'basically' forms ?green flag

    Heh. That's the question! I don't believe in forms, and yet I believe words mean. It sounds like platonism of some kind, but I don't think that's really believable either.
  • plaque flag
    2.7k
    Heh. That's the question! I don't believe in forms, and yet I believe words mean. It sounds like platonism of some kind, but I don't think that's really believable either.Moliere

    I believe language means also, I just don't know exactly what it means to say so. So I'm a semantic finitist rather than a semantic nihilist, right ?

    Here's Lakoff:
    It is a system of metaphor that structures our everyday conceptual system, including most abstract concepts, and that lies behind much of everyday language. The discovery of this enormous metaphor system has destroyed the traditional literal-figurative distinction, since the term literal, as used in defining the traditional distinction, carries with it all those false assumptions.
    ***

    As Derrida noted, metaphor is itself a metaphor. What the hell does it mean to call something a metaphor ? If metaphysics is metaphorical, then metaphor is playing a metaphysical role in the structure as center or basis. I call this the blurry go round. It's a merry hurrying through the fog.
  • Moliere
    4.7k
    I believe language means also, I just don't know exactly what it means to say so.green flag
    Yup! :D


    So I'm a semantic finitist rather than a semantic nihilist, right ?

    Sounds good to me :).

    For myself, I don't feel coherent enough to have a classification yet. It's just one of those questions which lingers in the back of my mind, one which I don't even know how to formulate clearly, even though here we are talking about meaning.

    It is a system of metaphor that structures our everyday conceptual system, including most abstract concepts, and that lies behind much of everyday language.green flag

    Not sure what "It" means here.

    As Derrida noted, metaphor is itself a metaphor. What the hell does it mean to call something a metaphor ? If metaphysics is metaphorical, then metaphor is playing a metaphysical role in the structure as center or basis. I call this the blurry go round. It's a merry hurrying through the fog.green flag

    I prefer to attempt to put the question of meaning aside from metaphysics, first. I think it makes much more sense to say we don't know metaphysics as we know science (points in favor of the structuralists -- comparison helps clarify meaning). But regardless of all that, surely we must be able to use language?

    I think I'm persuaded by the pragmatics of language. Meaning and use are not the same. But I think the method of looking at use clarifies meaning. Something I think about is that even though language on the whole has a possibly infinite number of meanings, any one token of meaning can't have any more than some finite number of meanings. "token" as in token/type.
  • Wayfarer
    22.5k
    the mental experiences, which these directly symbolize, are the same for allgreen flag

    I don't think he's referring to an aesthetic experience ('what a beautiful sunset!') or a passing thought ('I might go and get icecream'.) I think he's referring to the activities of formal reason. And indeed, there must be commonality there, mustn't there? If I say 'greater than', and you hear 'less than', then communication would be impossible, wouldn't it? There is an entire domain of conventional meanings, one would hope.

    one is tempted to imagine that which gives the sentence life as something in an occult sphere — Wittgenstein

    A lot of modern philosophy is deflationary with respect to the claims of traditional philosophy. Wittgenstein, I understand, was anti-metaphysical in his approach, and it is just this matter - the reality, or otherwise, of abstract objects - which is fundamental to metaphysics. A great deal of what has gone on in 20th c philosophy has been concerned with overthrowing such tropes.

    There's a recent Platonist philosopher I've noticed, Jerrold Katz, one of whose books is called The Metaphysics of Meaning. 'According to Katz, meaning is not simply a matter of convention or social agreement, but is rather grounded in the structure of reality itself. He contends that the meaning of a linguistic expression is not determined solely by its social context or by the intentions of the speaker (contra the 'natural language' philosophers) but rather by real facts about the world to which it refers.

    Katz distinguishes between referential and expressive meaning. Referential meaning is the aspect of meaning that is determined by the relationship between language and the world, while expressive meaning is the aspect of meaning that is determined by the speaker's intentions and emotions.

    He proposes a theory of semantic composition, which explains how the meaning of complex expressions can be derived from the meanings of their constituent parts. According to Katz, the meaning of a complex expression is not simply the sum of the meanings of its parts, but rather depends on the syntactic structure of the expression and the rules of semantic combination.' (Review here.)
  • Janus
    16.3k
    It seems to me that the issue regarding how words refer and mean is troubled by a necessarily doomed search for a causal or mechanical explanation, for an actual empirically discoverable causal link between the sound or the visual symbol and the object it signifies.

    My own view is that words refer to things, or mean something just because we take them to. We simply associate the sounds or the visual symbols with what we have learned to associate them, and there doesn't seem to be any great puzzle in that. The real puzzle is the consciousness that allows us to make those associations, and that there can be a shared world for us.

    The Katz books look interesting.
  • Tom Storm
    9.1k
    It seems to me that the issue regarding how words refer and mean is troubled by a necessarily doomed search for a causal or mechanical explanation, for an actual empirically discoverable causal link between the sound or the visual symbol and the object it signifies.Janus

    Yes, that seems to be the hub of it to me - what correspondence is there between the world and language? It's a pretty tentative connection and interpretive and context dependent, but there's certainly an illusion of signifier and signified mating to produce meaning, even if the post-structuralists have demonstrated the limitations of this relationship.
  • plaque flag
    2.7k
    There is an entire domain of conventional meanings, one would hope.Wayfarer

    Yes, there is something going on. But maybe Aristotle got it backwards. It's the 'external' synchronization that leads to the 'logical illusion' of 'internal' forms.' The language and its 'equivalence classes' (forms, concepts) are more feasibly cogenerated by our constant practical interaction which includes, among other more energy-intensive modifications of our shared world, the imposing of marks and noises called signs or words. We are so profoundly social and linguistic that the 'ghost' in the each of our machines is mostly the same ghost, which is how we mostly cooperate and understand one another.
  • plaque flag
    2.7k
    A great deal of what has gone on in 20th c philosophy has been concerned with overthrowing such tropes.Wayfarer

    Yes, and 'tropes' is a good word. They were just taking seriously the directive to know thyself. The 'rational animal' is the symbolical linguistic animal, the metaphysical metaphorical animal. What is the nature of meaning ? How are meaning and being entangled ? Can we still believe in a static notion of meaning, in the midst of our towers and rockets and chatbots ?
  • plaque flag
    2.7k
    According to Katz, meaning is not simply a matter of convention or social agreement, but is rather grounded in the structure of reality itself. He contends that the meaning of a linguistic expression is not determined solely by its social context or by the intentions of the speaker (contra the 'natural language' philosophers) but rather by real facts about the world to which it refers.Wayfarer

    I'd go so far to say that it is the structure of reality in some sense. And I'd say that of course it's determined by real facts of the world -- and that social context and intentions are themselves such facts.

    The idea that there is some meaningless stuff beneath appearances is, as I see, a confusion suggested by 'mental experiences,' as if humans are looking at the screen and not the world. It's the fear of error here which is the cause of that error. The metaphor of the control room in the skull is the most successful conspiracy theory in history. It's The Cave writ small. Atoms and intentions and toothaches exist on the same plane, or they could not signify (objects are obviously not just clumps of sensation but exist in a space of reasons -- but we need not take reasons as immaterial in any simple sense.)
  • plaque flag
    2.7k
    Referential meaning is the aspect of meaning that is determined by the relationship between language and the world, while expressive meaning is the aspect of meaning that is determined by the speaker's intentions and emotions.Wayfarer

    This implicitly casts intentions and emotions as otherworldly or outerwordly, evading our embodiment. Language is marks and noises in the world, not a layer smeared on top of it. (Please add an 'in my view' in front of all my claims. It'll save us both time.)
  • plaque flag
    2.7k
    is troubled by a necessarily doomed search for a causal or mechanical explanation...Janus

    What exactly do you mean by 'causal' or 'mechanical' though ?

    The problem of meaning haunts everything, which is not to say that it itself is not haunted in return. But that gets us back to the structuralism half of my point.
  • plaque flag
    2.7k
    But regardless of all that, surely we must be able to use language?Moliere

    Sure. We are practically successful. There are billions of us. I imagine philosophy as wanting a tighter and tighter grip and yet a larger and more articulated view of the world. To solidify and sharpen what we mean manifests something like a will to power and beauty. Why does a cat groom itself ?
  • plaque flag
    2.7k
    Something I think about is that even though language on the whole has a possibly infinite number of meanings, any one token of meaning can't have any more than some finite number of meanings. "token" as in token/type.Moliere

    You can think of an infinite number of tokens in a certain sense by adding context to each traditionally conceived token. You might never use 'token' twice in the same context. We can also imagine sentences as tokens for a countable infinity. And so on. But you make a good point about the reuse of words. There's a paper out there about the use and efficiency of ambiguity. Our short words tend to be ambiguous. We've learned to lean on the practical context to cheapen the cost of babble.
  • Janus
    16.3k
    Yes, that seems to be the hub of it to me - what correspondence is there between the world and language? It's a pretty tentative connection and interpretive and context dependent, but there's certainly an illusion of signifier and signified mating to produce meaning, even if the post-structuralists have demonstrated the limitations of this relationship.Tom Storm

    For me what you say invokes another layer, another wrinkle in the fabric.When we ask for correspondence between language and world, are we asking for stable, but hidden, lines of connection, like unseen electrical cables, between words and the world "as it really is"?

    I see no problem with correspondence between language and the phenomenal world, since I see the latter as a paradigmatically familiar, collectively linguistically generated illusion that we all find it impossible not to be inducted into. I hear someone say "it is raining" and I know exactly what to look for, simply because of the association of these words with an everyday experience almost everyone would be familiar with.

    It is correspondence between language and the noumenal world which is inscrutable, even impossible. And I think it is that impossible correspondence which is really being asked for. It is impossible because language can correspond only to what we commonly experience, simply by association, on account of the fact that we take it to correspond, but nothing beyond that.

    So, the idea that language could correspond to the noumenal world is neither correct nor incorrect, but is a "not even wrong" category error; we don't even know what it could mean for them to correspond to the noumenal world.
  • Tom Storm
    9.1k
    So, the idea that language could correspond to the noumenal world is neither correct nor incorrect, but is a "not even wrong" category error.Janus

    No real disagreement but how does this reflect on our capacity to talk meaningfully about ontology and metaphysics? Nevertheless it often does seem a metaphysical puzzle that we are able to understand each other at all. No wonder some religious folk consider God foundationally necessary for intelligibility.

    It is correspondence between language and the noumenal world which is inscrutable, even impossibleJanus

    Are you coming at this as a Kantian?
  • Janus
    16.3k
    What exactly do you mean by 'causal' or 'mechanical' though ?

    The problem of meaning haunts everything, which is not to say that it itself is not haunted in return. But that gets us back to the structuralism half of my point.
    green flag

    We all knows what 'causal' means in the ordinary sense. Same with 'mechanical'. The meaning of both just consists in one thing acting on another to bring about effect, change, event or process.

    If we think that if we don't know what words mean or refer to, then we cannot understand ourselves to be asking the questions about meaning or reference in the first place.
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Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

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.