Streetlight
unenlightened
the limits of my language are the limits of my world? Has meaning been expressed adequately with "I love you more than words can say."? — Wallows
Metaphysician Undercover
Words cannot tell what lies in unexplored territory, until we go and explore it. — unenlightened
unenlightened
Oh I like that — Metaphysician Undercover
Terrapin Station
Metaphysician Undercover
unenlightened
Shawn
Words cannot tell what lies in unexplored territory, until we go and explore it. — unenlightened
Shawn
Tsk tsk. All these people taking the statement at a constative, rather than performative level. — StreetlightX
unenlightened
Is this another case of having a huge giant beetle in a box, and saying that it is so awesome to have? — Wallows
Shawn
I don't think so. — unenlightened
unenlightened
I've already supposed that nothing in the territory is illustrative of how I feel about some person. — Wallows
BC
6.1k
Does the following sentence...:
"I love you more than words can say."
... express its meaning? — Wallows
Sentences don't literally "express meaning," you assign meaning to them. — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
The author expressed something, and that something is carried in the sentence. Arbitrarily assigning meaning gets us... where? — Bitter Crank
Shawn
It doesn't. It just raises stupid non-problems mistaken for philosophical ones. — StreetlightX
Streetlight
Shawn
Only the naive and the philosophical think that 'I love you more than words can say' expresses a statement about the relationship between words and one's love. One actually has to dumb oneself down to treat it like that, as most in this thread seem to have done. — StreetlightX
Shawn
I wouldn't. — StreetlightX
Streetlight
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