Yes, it's about the apples. But how does one talk about the apples? By talking (and understanding), nothing more. The point I am trying to make is that realism is not required to talk about the apples. We can talk about things that aren't words and aren't experiences and aren't ideas even if anti-realism holds. — Yahadreas
I'm not. I mentioned gesturing. — Yahadreas
When we gesture the act of reference is a visual experience. To gesture at the apple only requires that I see you gesture at the apple. — Yahadreas
I'm not saying that they're not there. — Yahadreas
The actual apples can be on your table even if anti-realism holds. Because for there to be actual apples on your table is for "there are actual apples on your table" to be true, and "there are actual apples on your table" can be true even if anti-realism holds (e.g. if the coherence theory of truth is correct). — Yahadreas
That's just quote mining. — Wosret
I go on to clarify that they just mean the same thing, and then further clarify that they can mean the same thing, but can also mean different things. — Wosret
But they clearly don't mean the same thing as language and things like apples are normally understood. And I see no good reason to abandon this understanding. I don't mean to talk about the word "apple" when I talk about the thing that is called an apple. They are not one and the same; they are one thing and another different thing. — Sapientia
Obviously you don't mean to talk about tasty apples when you mean to talk about the word "apple", but most uses of the word "apple" aren't meta, and do mean to talk about tasty apples, and not the word "apple". — Wosret
The point that I was trying to make was that meaning isn't a matter of reference back to some particle, or neutral object, but rather is a constantly changing, flowing relationship with people and the world, that we, and things take part in, or participate in. The big whoop is that the world apple doesn't refer to any particular apples, and when one does refer to an apple, it is being brought into participating with discourse for some purpose, and isn't the origin of the meaning of any terms, or the meaning maker. — Wosret
But you keep making statements which exclude it. — Sapientia
It's both true and trivial that we talk about the apples by talking (and understanding). But if nothing more is required, then the apples don't need to exist. And if the apples don't exist, then how does one truly talk about the apples? Although it might seem that such statements are about the apples, wouldn't such statements actually be about something else or nothing, or not about anything?
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I know. But you implied that there need be nothing more involved in referring to the actual apples on my table than speaking certain sounds or writing certain symbols. That is not the case, since there needs to be the actual apples on my table, and since I can refer to them without speaking certain sounds or writing certain symbols.
Agreed. However, anti-realism requires an unusual interpretation of language which I reject.
Unusual in the sense of not common, yes. But I think it far more sensible than the traditional realist account where there's some metaphysical relationship between the sounds we speak and things which are ontologically independent of language and experience and ideas.
I take it you agree with Derrida, then that words can only refer to other words? — Sentient
The idea that only realism allows for words to refer to things is mistaken. Anti-realism allows for this too.
I never suggested the above, to the best of my knowledge. — Sentient
Anti-realism rejects the notion of an actual ontology, does it not?
With that in mind, it seems to me that you are running these two senses of the word "anti-realist" together, which is leading to a bit of confusion. It seems like what you are really doing here is arguing for a realist theory of reference that can be explained entirely in terms of your anti-realist ontology. — Aaron R
An anti-realist ontology is typically understood as one that is committed to the actual existence of only "mental" or "experiential" entities such as ideas, propositions, sensations, percepts, emotions, etc.
I don't find it at all problematic for an anti-realist to accept the truth of "chairs exist" and "chairs are not experiences, ideas, or words" (e.g. by arguing for the coherence theory of truth and showing that these two statements cohere with some other set of specified sentences). The fact that one is arguing for a non-correspondence account of truth is why it is not realist. — Michael
What makes the difference is when you say that objects are ontologically dependent on experiences, ideas, or words. — jamalrob
Put like that, it looks like a matter of taste whether you want to call that position anti-realism or merely something like deflationary realism.
When I use the name "Frodo" I am referring to the hobbit, not to the word "Frodo" or my idea of Frodo. Realism is not required for words to refer to more than just our words and our ideas. — Michael
In the case of referring to the apples on the table one might say that using and understanding words is not sufficient; it is also required that there are apples on the table -- and so it is also required that "there are apples on the table" is true. And as the coherency theory of truth allows for "there are apples on the table" to be true it allows for there to be apples on the table. So the coherency theory allows for the statement "there are apples on the table" to truly talk about the apples on the table. — Michael
I'd argue that although the coherency theory of truth allows for "there are apples on the table" to be true, it doesn't have as a prerequisite, that it necessarily follow that there are in fact apples on the table in reality, in accordance with how we normally understand words such as "fact" and "reality". I think that that's problematic. — Sapientia
I don't think I'd consider it a realist theory of reference. It's effectively a disquotational theory of reference; "chairs" refers to chairs. It's a parallel to the disquotational theory of truth.
Realism and anti-realism only come into the picture when considering the ontological status of chairs (and truth). — Michael
I think that's a far too simplistic account of anti-realism. I don't find it at all problematic for an anti-realist to accept the truth of "chairs exist" and "chairs are not experiences, ideas, or words" (e.g. by arguing for the coherence theory of truth and showing that these two statements cohere with some other set of specified sentences). The fact that one is arguing for a non-correspondence account of truth is why it is not realist. — Michael
What you mean here is that the coherency theory of truth doesn't have apples existing in the realist sense as a prerequisite. And so your criticism of antirealism is that it isn't realism. That's question-begging. — Michael
What I am saying is that it becomes a realist theory of reference when you attempt to explain it in terms of some ontology, even if the ontology is an anti-realist one. — Aaron R
What you seem to be saying is that the anti-realist can genuinely accept as true, claims such as "chairs actually exist, and they are not experiences, ideas, or words" because their theory of truth commits them only to the actual existence of such things as experiences, ideas and words. I'd be interested to see how you handle the fact that, prima facie, this leads to a situation in which the anti-realist is committed to two claims about what actually exist that don't cohere. It would seem that the anti-realist's own commitment to the coherence theory of truth would necessitate the rejection of one or the other statement.
I'd also be interested to see if you can explain coherence without ultimately appealing to claims about the behavior of rational agents in the physical world. Would you mind offering an explanation of what the coherence between two statements consists in?
It just doesn't make sense to have a true statement about reality that doesn't reflect reality. You could have an elaborate web of true statements that don't in fact reflect reality. — Sapientia
Like I said in my first post, realism is required to give an account of reference that is more plausible than alternatives.
Anti-realism doesn't entail that we have true statements about reality that don't reflect reality. It entails that reality isn't to be understood in realist terms. So, again, you're begging the question by assuming that reality is that which is ontologically-independent of language, experience, and ideas and remarking that this is inconsistent with anti-realism. — Michael
I don't see how requiring an ontological separation between sentences and subjects makes for a more plausible account of reference. — Michael
It seems far more complicated. One has to explain the nature and origin of the relationship between words and the sort of things that satisfy realist metaphysics such that the former "denote" or "are about" the latter. — Michael
I don't see how it's explained in terms of some ontology. And even if it was, how does explaining it in terms of an anti-realist ontology make it realist? — Michael
I don't think that their theory of truth commits them to the actual existence of only such things as experiences, ideas, and words, so there aren't two contradictory statements. — Michael
Appealing to the behaviour of rational agents in the physical world doesn't entail realism (as one will take an anti-realist approach to behaviour and physics), so this isn't a problem. — Michael
And coherence between statements consists in one statement following from another (or at least not contradicting one another). It has nothing to do with realism. — Michael
I think [anti-realism is] far more sensible than the traditional realist account where there's some metaphysical relationship between the sounds we speak and things which are ontologically independent of language and experience and ideas. — Michael
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