How shall we define irony? Well, that’s just the point - any transparent definition will be ironic exactly because it will contain no irony. “The opposite of wrinkly” is indeed an ironic definition, but it does not render irony in genuine terms. In fact, nothing does. Irony is a property that communicates truth through apparent untruth. It’s there because you can’t see it. It emerges from an invisible contradiction in terms.
One of my favourite personal catchphrases is “everything is ironic”. This is demonstrable because Irony is a semantic phenomenon and all semantics are the products of relationships between objects and their contexts. Change perspective and you change context, thus every mental object can be presented ironically.
So, the most potent examples of irony emerge from scenarios in which objects and the expected meaning in their context appear perpendicular to the more immediate meaning of that context.
Many of these examples involve basic symbolism, or what Wittgenstein might term “simple signs”. My personal favourite is Zero - it is a sign that signifies ‘nothing’, but must necessarily be ‘something’ in order to do so. Other evident examples of such ‘primary colour’ irony include fire engines on fire
I have many arguments in this forum as to whether humans are categorically different to other animals. Most say they’re not, but ironically that’s something only a human could say. — Wayfarer
Ironically, this David Moore doesn't know what irony is. — DifferentiatingEgg
Or am I just severely overthinking — Darkneos
No, I think you’re on the right track. It’s a little like humor or explaining a joke - if you have to explain why a joke is funny then it’s not funny. And there are those - this includes a particular type of American - on whom ‘irony is lost’, who can’t see the irony of something. In which cases it’s pointless to try and explain why it’s ironic.
I suppose that both irony and a humor (at least not slapstick humor) both rely on cognitive dissonance, a kind of double meaning, a mismatch between what was expected and what actually happened. — Wayfarer
From the article ‘the most potent examples of irony emerge from scenarios in which objects and the expected meaning in their context appear perpendicular to the more immediate meaning of that context.’
It’s pretty close to what I said. — Wayfarer
They are simply words that remind us that there is no ultimate metalanguage that serves to describe language. It is the same with the word "metaphor". You define it in a non-metaphorical sense and there is a contradiction in what it is to speak metaphorically and to define metaphor, that is, you betray its meaning. This implies that there is no metalanguage of definitions valid for all cases. Moreover, when we believe we have a metalanguage we use it as any other way of speaking that you can also define in another metalanguage of a higher order; and so on ad infinitum. That is, there is no ultimate metalanguage from which to define all aspects (or being) of language. — JuanZu
Everything isn't irony because most things don't end in aporia or comedy. — Moliere
"The Logic of Mathematics and the Imaginative and Creative Process by which we Make Sense by Rendering the Continuous Discretely and Producing Continuity from the Discrete" — Darkneos
I'm not sure what you mean. — Darkneos
We do not focus on the truth we already know. "Irony" like most things surfacing through minds as culture or history, is not a definite singular thing. It represents first an organic feeling best left not displaced by signifiers. But inevitably minds come up with "irony" [for the feeling triggered when facts reveal themselves to be fictions and vice versa]. And its definition is already impossible because it is not the unnamable feeling, but the construction for it in code. But because it is constructed we give to it also constructed meanings. If conventionally accepted within a range of functional applications of that signifier, then we settle upon that as "definition." Fair enough. A reasonably necessarily dialectic for "irony" to function as code. — ENOAH
But then philosophy (also first an unamable feeling, stretched by Mind into [a] near infinite structure of signifiers, requiring extra lengthy narratives to arrive at the feeling [akin to discovery]) comes along and takes the dialectic beyond the reasonable conventional one designed to give the Signifier some signifieds, the construction of meaning [out of feeling]; but to a place which is clearly more fictional, a game claiming to be uncovering the core of truth. — ENOAH
What does it mean to say "everything is ironic", or "relative?" We claim to be making sense of it, but, ironically we're
confounding it further. — ENOAH
Well he seems to think differently, though in my view if irony is based on expectation then nothing is ironic if you have no expectations.
That's why I'm thinking he's meaning relative or subjective, not ironic. — Darkneos
I don't take Quora seriously, to be honest. I participated a for a small time there in answering labor questions and saw how it's basically a social media game. — Moliere
I don't think irony is based on a lack of expectations, though if you're a dullard without any expectations I could see how irony is lost on a person. — Moliere
why even post that or reply to me to begin with? — Darkneos
Philosophy isn't a feeling so much as a system or method. — Darkneos
think it does make sense but some people like to insist otherwise, so far no one has been able to show you can't define it. — Darkneos
To cut to the chase, I/we can't help it. It's autonomous. — ENOAH
The exploration further, call it philosophy, is a desire to build meaning. That desire is rooted in a positive feeling. We may not perceive that root feeling on the surface, so overcrowded with layers of constructions, but at the root is an unnable positive feeling. That is what I said was the first movement in philosophy. — ENOAH
Of course it's [grown into] a system etc. But everything beyond whatever that positive feeling is--the feeling both our bodies are after by, for lack, "discovery"--is making-up meaning. — ENOAH
In the end some of us produce functional new paths, some don't, but we're all making meaning to attach to organic feelings. So ultimately we're confounding any path to that once real feeling, with making sense. — ENOAH
I can't say what David Moore means. — Moliere
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.