I dunno, maybe I've missed something but this move of essentializing (it's a real word, fight me) the meaning of some word doesn't seem to really move the debate along at all unless all parties involved already agree on the same meaning. — MindForged
The word "Collection" has an important role in mathematical history because it, along with the alternative "class", was proposed as a name for a group of things (NB the folk, not algebraic meaning of group is intended here) that may or may not be a set. Thus a set is a special sort of collection or class, that obeys certain properties as laid out in the Zermelo-Frankel axioms, or the axioms of some other consistent formulation of set-theory.I know that the professional mathematicians do not define sets in a way which assumes they must be finite collections. — MindForged
On one hand, I know that the professional mathematicians do not define sets in a way which assumes they must be finite collections. On the other hand, I was running into a wall where the insistence was that the very meaning of "collection" entails finitude. — MindForged
Okay, so sets are by definition, conceptually finite collections so any attempt to define or talk about infinite collections is incoherent on pain of contradiction — MindForged
I eventually realized it was in fact a disagreement in the meaning of the words involved (which just about sums up philosophical disagreement...) — MindForged
Words are arbitrary. We can use any string of symbols to refer to anything. Just look at all of the different languages humans use with different strings of symbols referring to the same thing ("tree" in English and "arbol" in Spanish).Ok, so in another thread I got into what felt like an interminable back and forth with a couple of users. After what must have been a few pages of mostly repeated points, I eventually realized it was in fact a disagreement in the meaning of the words involved (which just about sums up philosophical disagreement...). So my issue was that the conflict was about if some word crucially meant some particular thing irrespective of context. Screw it, I'll stop being vague about it. — MindForged
I don't see why this follows.
http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Collection.html
Are you using "collection" in this specific sense? But wouldn't that mean that a collection is a (countable) set, rather than a set being a collection? — Banno
A word is a signifier. Reference is the signified. Together, they make a sign.
The same signifier can be used in two different signs.
Do you like that scheme? — frank
So, "the" refers to an act of indicating or specifying some things or class of things. — Janus
"Could" is a name of the concept of possibility, "of" is a name of the concept of belonging or subsumption. — Janus
So you think we can understand words even if we have no idea what they mean? — Janus
Concepts are shared understandings. — Janus
Meaning is the relationship between cause and effect. In the case of language use, words mean what the speaker or writer intended to convey. If it were the dictionary definition then we couldn't use metaphors. If it were the interpretation of the listener then why do speakers say, "I didn't mean it that way.", "Or that isn't what I said." when listeners misinterpret what is said. Do listeners misinterpret? If they do, then obviously meaning cannot be how it is interpreted. What exactly is the listener interpreting if not the intent behind the speakers use of words? If meaning were the listeners' interpretation then many listeners can come up with different meanings to the same string of words, and then where would we be with meaning?What sort of thing could a meaning be? Is it the dictionary definition? The intent of the speaker? The interpretation of the listener? — Banno
Yes, what of them? Metaphors are simply new ways we use symbols to refer to things based on our intent. We could say the same thing in a humorous or depressing way by using metaphors. So metaphors seem to add an extra layer of context beyond what the usual string of words that are used to say the same thing - all related to intent.What of metaphor, where the word means something that is not the meaning of the word? — Banno
Trite. Instead, forget about meaning, especially meanings as references, and look to what we do with the words. To understand a word is just to be able to make use of it. — Banno
OK; so the meaning of a word is the concept to which it has a referential associations; and the concept is a shared understanding. So the meaning of the word is... the shared understanding it refers to?
So what is a word's shared understanding? — Banno
I won't be drawn into the child's game of asking of any explanation that something is such and such: — Janus
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