Hanover
Banno
kindred
T Clark
"When I think in language, there aren’t ‘meanings’ going through my mind in addition to the verbal expressions: the language is itself the vehicle of thought." — PI §329 — Hanover
Hanover
This of course is the problem. Assuming all thought is verbal is clearly not right. — T Clark
As I noted elsewhere, the answers to your questions are not philosophy, they’re science. — T Clark
Banno
I doubt anyone likely to participate in this discussion knows enough to have a credible opinion about this subject. — T Clark
Banno
Hanover
So briefly and dogmatically, mentalese as an innate, computational system is incoherent. — Banno
The brain’s architecture (neural nets, not symbolic computation) supports this derivative view. — Banno
Banno
If the mind computes symbolically, we'd be heading in support of Fodor and Pinker, and we really would have to conclude that all thinking is symbolic, linguistic, and indeed, algorithmic.Let's say it didn't, and we discovered the mind computed symbolically, why would that matter? — Hanover
Banno
If, of course, we look not to meaning but to use, those neural weightings and whatever do stuff with hands and eyes and so on. Language develops as we do stuff together. Then we learn to talk to ourselves internally. A potted analysis, an outline, but it might be worthy of some consideration.What is incoherent is how those pre-linguistic whatevers can "mean" something. — Hanover
apokrisis
Anyway, this got me to thinking, which is that one would expect one's internal langauge to be highly compressed, meaning it need not adhere to conventional grammar in order to be language, — Hanover
Paine
J
Manuel
What then does the hyper-compressed vehicle look like if not letters, words, and sentences? How does that shrug look prior to my shoulder shrugging?
Anyway, I leave this open to thoughts, efforts to clarify whatever my misunderstandings might be, and possibly to better understand what language actually is under this framework. — Hanover
Hanover
If the mind computes symbolically, we'd be heading in support of Fodor and Pinker, and we really would have to conclude that all thinking is symbolic, linguistic, and indeed, algorithmic. — Banno
Hanover
That's why you get the phenomenon of not being able to find "the right word". There's something there we can't say. Maybe a passage in a novel gets it, maybe a scene in a movie. Sometimes nothing. — Manuel
ProtagoranSocratist
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