As a cat watches expectantly, but wordlessly by a mouse hole?
I don't know why you want to call it communication, — unenlightened
Usually, the ability to interpret such is intuitive and not really learned, but there are people who cannot do this, even with exposure to others. I believe it is wired naturally in healthy people to read and communicate fluently. — Lone Wolf
That brought to mind those short Japanese haiku poems.As a cat watches expectantly, but wordlessly by a mouse hole? — unenlightened
I want to say it isn't anthropomorphism. There is something genuine about it even though it's not the way we typically think of conversation.Maybe the kind of background anthropomorphism ↪frank describes is a way we secretly relate to the world — Kym
For example, bees communicate to each other, but saying that sun communicates location to the bees seems to me a bit off mark. — javra
1. Sometimes you can find that a metaphor or an analogy works because the things compared share an underlying mechanism that is literally, not figuratively, the same. This is always worth investigating. — Srap Tasmaner
2. From the other direction, there is Grice's theory that grounds "non-natural meaning", the way the English word "cloud" means [[cloud]], in "natural meaning", the way dark clouds mean it's going to rain. Most folks shy away from connecting those directly as he does. — Srap Tasmaner
3. Some of us do speak to things regularly. (When I find something where it shouldn't be, there's a fair chance I'll speak to it --"You're not supposed to be there," "What are you doing here?" -- that sort of thing.) Why do we do that? — Srap Tasmaner
4. There are lots of idioms that recognize what you're talking about: listen to what your body is telling you, numbers don't lie (i.e., they tell the truth), etc. — Srap Tasmaner
I think humans have an innate capacity for language that starts out as the creation of random sounds along with mimicry. Interaction with other people selects and refines communication (a fair amount of which is body language). — frank
Is there something self-conscious or self-reflective about intentional communication that's missing from non-intentional?I see no basis for separating out the intentional from the unintentional when trying to decipher meaning. — Hanover
I want to focus on negotiation — frank
We start with raw interaction. — frank
Generally though, I too tend to limit “communication” to meanings intentionally transferred from one sentient being to other sentient beings. For example, bees communicate to each other, but saying that sun communicates location to the bees seems to me a bit off mark. — javra
So, should the notion of communication pertain only to organic objects? And if so, at what level(s) of abstraction (i.e., physiology and/or psychology)?
For those who would appropriately refer to the etymology of the word "communication" from the Latin "communico" (share, impart, make common), I would point out that what the process of communication shares between informer(transmitter, sender) and informee (receiver, recipient) is code, given:
1) Communication: the process of encoding, transmitting, conveying, receiving, and decoding, data (form).
2) Code: transformed, translated, or converted data (form).
3) Information: communicated data (form). — Galuchat
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