You don't really believe that something has to be interpretable by the rules of first order predicate logic to qualify as language do you? — Metaphysician Undercover
Why not? — Banno
...not all language use follows the rules of first order predicate logic. — Metaphysician Undercover
For example? — Banno
Yet being able to interpret any given English sentence in FOPL does not imply that we can interpret every sentence.
What we can do - and this was Davidson's program - is to see how far the proposal can go. What sentences can we satisfactorily interpret? — Banno
Further, not all language use need be translated into FOPL, so long as part of it is. — Banno
Try "Let's go". — Metaphysician Undercover
if there are some sentences which cannot be satisfactorily interpreted, then one cannot claim the capacity to interpret any sentence. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't think that's true. Your claim is that in order to be called "a language" it must be interpretable by FOPL. But I think that language is defined by a capacity for communication. So if some parts of a language may carry our communication with utterances that cannot be satisfactorily interpreted by FOPL, then we can conceive of "a language" which cannot be interpreted by FOPL. That language might be less extensive and more restrictive in the sense of what it can say. — Metaphysician Undercover
"Grammar tells us what kind of object anything is" (§372). — StreetlightX
"Augustine does not speak of there being any difference between kinds of word." — StreetlightX
One last consideration: to the degree that human languages mostly share the same 'core' set of grammatical categorisations (with a few significant variations here and there) can be to a large extent put down to our shared physiognomy: the fact that we are (mostly) upright, forward-facing, symmetrical and motile beings. Moreover, we occupy a certain and shared scale of space and time (not shared by a mountain, say, who, if could speak, we would definitely not understand), with similar sets of 'epistemic concerns'. — StreetlightX
Put another way, you might try to translate "language" as "a capacity for communication", but if you do not understand what communication is, you have not made any progress. — Banno
He treated all words as nouns; to be defined by pointing.
Do you agree with this? — Banno
FOPL can go Flop itself. A bunch of analytic philosophical tripe. — StreetlightX
Actually, that's exactly how understanding progresses, We proceed from particular instances of the individual, through the specific to the more general. — Metaphysician Undercover
language is defined by a capacity for communication. — Metaphysician Undercover
If the genus is the capacity for communication, what is the differentia? — Banno
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