I also didn’t bother following along when he began analyzing the poetry, and skipped to the end, which didn’t seem to be saying very much. Could be I’m missing out, but what I took away from it was that Collingwood is a good one to read on this stuff. (Self-reliance doesn’t imply that you shouldn’t read books, only that you shouldn’t get all your ideas from books.) — Jamal
Cool, we’re on page 3. Gotta beat Banno’s 8 page discussion on definitions from three years ago. — Jamal
... we have only to notice that if we speak about defining words we refer to something very different from what is referred to, meant, by 'defining things.' When we define words we take another set of words which may be used with the same referent as the first, ie.,we substitute a symbol which will be better understood in a given situation. With things, on the other hand, no such substitution is involved. A so-called definition of a horse as opposed to the definition of the word 'horse,' is a statement about it enumerating properties by means of which it may be compared with and distinguished from other things. There is thus no rivalry between 'verbal' and 'real' definitions.
What I generally do at about this point in the discussion, is bring out the weapon of mass destruction that is The Meaning of Meaning, by Ogden and Richards. It is the definitive text, and to my mind an object lesson in the futility of trying to define a word and thereby divorcing meaning from context.
When I say 'context', I invite you to imagine not just the words around the word in question, but also the armchair around the philosopher and the ever-collapsing political order in which they are necessarily embedded. — unenlightened
Gotta beat Banno’s 8 page discussion on definitions from three years ago. — Jamal
Look up the definition of a word in the dictionary.
Then look up the definition of each of the words in that definition.
Iterate.
Given that there are a finite number of words in the dictionary, the process will eventually lead to repetition.
If one's goal were to understand a word, one might suppose that one must first understand the words in its definition. But this process is circular.
There must, therefore, be a way of understanding a word that is not given by providing its definition.
Now this seems quite obvious; and yet so many begin their discussion with "let's first define our terms". — Banno
Like kale, definitions might have a place on the plate, with the right accompaniments and in the right quantity.I have a friend who refuses to eat kale because of the bullshit surrounding the supposed superfood. I have explained to him that just as the bullshit is not a reason to eat kale, it is not a reason not to eat kale. It's irrelevant to the decision to eat kale. — Banno
why do you think it lost you — Banno
What are you trying to say? When you asked
me that I closed my laptop, offended. Why? It never mattered what
I said. — Will Harris
Because figuring out the language is part of the experience of poetry. Because providing definitions would, in many cases, distract from the experience of the poetry. — T Clark
The point of the OP of that thread was a fairly simple one, that definitions do not, in a very important sense, give us meaning. — Banno
Clichés are to be avoided because they do our thinking for us (and imagining, feeling, etc), or they shut out thinking; — Jamal
The poem is a showing, not a saying. — Banno
They are something to play with, juggle, kick down the street. — T Clark
Art is magic delivered from the lie of being truth — Adorno, Minima Moralia
Every concept is indeed internally dynamic, and the task is somehow to do justice to this dynamic character. And here it is often enough language itself that will have to furnish the canon for the appropriate use of concepts. — Adorno, An Introduction to Dialectics
paintings exist to teach us how to see the world in a new way. — plaque flag
:up:And as soon as you stipulate that, I want an artwork that doesn't teach you to see the world anew. — Banno
But art did not decline along with the decline of magic rituals and beliefs; and now, in invoking and manipulating the spirits of things in its works—in bringing out the meaning of things in their interconnectedness and in their irreducible particularity, in treating things as spiritual rather than as specimens for scientific study—art continues to perform magic but liberated from the need to claim that there are supernatural entities or that it has the power to influence nature and events. — Jamal
Similarly, we can make arguments by beginning with a statement of the conclusion—indeed I think this is the clearest and most common way of presenting arguments in philosophy. — Jamal
That is to say, it’s in the use of a term that we can understand the meaning of concepts, not primarily by definitions. — Jamal
Adorno means it almost literally though, — Jamal
In the sense that the same practice carried on without that lie. — Jamal
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