You said that the use produces a boundary. — Luke
So he never introduced the notion of "conventional use", as you are claiming. You are adding that, and it distorts what Wittgenstein has actually said. He has distinguished between having a boundary and not having a boundary. The boundary is produced when the word is used. Each instance of use being for a particular, or "special" (besondern) purpose. — Metaphysician Undercover
Furthermore, in your previous post you read Wittgenstein as posing a paradox and... — Luke
Now, after I pointed out your error, you pretend that none of this was your position. — Luke
Wittgenstein is referring to the conventional use of the word, not to a special purpose use. — Luke
What you call my "error" was based in your unwarranted introduction of the concept of "conventional use". Remove that assumption (that there is such a thing as "conventional use") because it is unsupported by the text, and the appearance of error disappears. — Metaphysician Undercover
Your error was your repeated claim that a) use creates a boundary; and that b) instances of use are for a special purpose. — Luke
However, we can decide to draw a limit to the concept, if we choose to, for a special purpose. It is not an instance of use that draws this boundary, but our agreement in a particular instance or for a particular purpose to use the word in this special (more specific) way. Otherwise, there is no boundary to the concept and it will just have it's usual unbounded meaning. — Luke
But is it senseless to say “Stay roughly here”? Imagine that I were standing with someone in a city square and said that. As I say it, I do not bother drawing any boundary, but just make a pointing gesture - as if I were indicating a particular spot. And this is just how one might explain what a game is. One gives examples and intends them to be taken in a particular way.
I think it's important, as we think about what Wittgenstein is saying, to think about how we as individuals make these kinds of mistakes in our own thinking. So, where have we gone wrong in our thinking by making the mistakes that Wittgenstein points out. It's one thing to grasp what he's saying, but it's another to actually apply it as we do philosophy. — Sam26
I've said it myself, but we have to be careful, i.e., if meaning equates to use, then it would follow that anyone, or any group who used a word or concept incorrectly, could make the claim that their use of the word is the correct use. — Sam26
MU, what you're saying goes way beyond what I'm saying, so don't equate the two. — Sam26
The way you talk about rules seems confusing to me. — Sam26
On the whole I think the thread is going well. I hope we don't give up on it like so many other threads. — Sam26
Of course we can't know that; what we can look for are places where distinct uses are thought to be the same - "does nothing exist", for instance; or where use in one area is taken to contradict use in another - free will and physical determinism, for instance.Can every case of incorrect use be resolved using Wittgenstein's method? — Sam26
Try this. "Stand roughly there" does not signify an area at all. It signifies a point, which has not been properly determined. — Metaphysician Undercover
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