. The kind of grammatical categories 'natural' to a lion would be - or would probably be (this is Wittgenstein's not-unfair-wager) - quite different from a humans. — StreetlightX
And recognisably, they interacted. — Banno
What did these "language games" look like? — Banno
But why call these behaviours language games? — Banno
Grammar here is adherence to a language game - would that be about right? — Banno
Nuh. — Banno
That is, the lion would do very different things with words? — Banno
...but one can have a completely grammatically correct sentence that does not belong to a language game. — StreetlightX
You want to judge rules as correct or incorrect without reference to rules? — Banno
Interesting. I had thought that to some extent Wittgenstein is using "grammar" in a broader sense than mere rules of syntax. — Banno
Those who insist that we could understand a lion talking are like Augutine: they don't pay attention to kinds, to grammar, and think everything is just a matter of semantics without grammar. To be clear, I don't think Wittgenstein's stipulation is categorical: at some point, after alot of work and effort, we would be able to understand the lion.
But the point is that the grammatical types which are marked and unmarked in lionese would be so vastly different that it would be not just another lanaguge, but another kind of language altogether. There might be grammatical markings that exist that simply have no correlate in English - or in any human language - nor could they exist, even though we might come very close to reflecting the same meaning with some clever grammatical combinatorics. — StreetlightX
Given that grammatical categories aren't even the same for alot of human languages — StreetlightX
the question really ought to be what good reason would there be to believe that a lion would employ broadly similar grammatical parsings as humans? — StreetlightX
Obviously not enough to disable relatively easy translation between languages. Are there human natural languages where, by principle, you couldn't formulate the idea of category? — Akanthinos
Same basic nervous system. Literally the same evolutive landscape. And we've already performed (in parts) backwards the bridging to their world (by developing a relatively healthy field of feline psychological study).
J+L points toward this. Lions probably already have categories broadly pointing to 'friend' and 'foe', practical utility (prob much more limited), not price, but probably risk (which is pretty similar). And I knowmy cat can see stuff as boring or interesting, according to her wise designs.
I don't think assuming these categories to be the same for most beings, especially similar ones, is *necessarily* chauvinistic or naive. These point to phenomenal markers which are common to species which play "the same games" in this world. And despite being vastly different, me and my cat, on many points, "play the same games", according to the same rules. I put more flourish around it, and she puts more grace. — Akanthinos
Is there a good reason to believe that a lion would resolve the basic questions of ontology assembling any differently then we do? Individuals, classes, attributes, relations, function terms, restrictions, rules, axioms, events... Which one would the lion miss? For that matter, which one a neutron star would miss? — Akanthinos
I suspect that lions are not great talkers. But whales and dolphins are. And we do not understand them. — unenlightened
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