Yeah, considering that rules are not yet discussed at this early stage, one is hard pressed to know what MU thinks he is talking about. — StreetlightX
3... It is as if someone were to say: "A game consists in moving objects
about on a surface according to certain rules . . ."—and we replied:
You seem to be thinking of board games, but there are others. You
can make your definition correct by expressly restricting it to those games.
I don't think you'll get much out of this reading group by simply hewing to this position and then measuring everything in the PI against it. The point here is to understand what and why Witty says what he does, not contrast every section with Terrapin's pet theory of meaning. Nobody is here to engage with the latter. — StreetlightX
It would be useful to stick to the text. If people want to throw around their own theories I don’t think this is the place right? — I like sushi
Does anyone disagree with what Wittgenstein is arguing, that it is impossible to learn language solely through ostension? — Metaphysician Undercover
For me to agree or disagree we need to clarify just what learning amounts to. If learning is the idea of someone giving something to you wholesale, where you don't have to do anything in order to gain it (sometimes people seem to have that, or something close to it, in mind with "learning"), then no, I wouldn't disagree that it's impossible to learn language solely through ostension. — Terrapin Station
If learning, however, includes the notion of figuring things out on one's own via deduction, contemplation, etc., in response to presentations that are made to one (which is what learning should imply in my view), then yes, I'd disagree that it is impossible to learn language solely through ostension. — Terrapin Station
Isn't it clear that learning is not a case of someone simply giving you something — Metaphysician Undercover
Re your second part, you then go on to treat "learning" as if it might refer to something completely passive, lol — Terrapin Station
I would say that it is impossible to learn anything solely via ostension — Metaphysician Undercover
So if we're defining things so that it's impossible to learn anything solely via ostension, why would we even ask the question in the first place re whether it's possible to learn a language via ostension? — Terrapin Station
So if we're defining things so that it's impossible to learn anything solely via ostension, why would we even ask the question in the first place re whether it's possible to learn a language via ostension? — Terrapin Station
Of course, in that case, it would seem that maybe we're using an odd definition or description of the term "learn," because normally we'd say that we can learn some things via demonstration, via ostension, etc. — Terrapin Station
One has already to know (or be able to do) something in order to be
capable of asking a thing's name. But what does one have to know?
That observation wasn't brought up as a definition. — Valentinus
The answer to that is quite obvious. Augustine had described language as being learned by ostension. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is the problem, if ostensive definition is a matter of assigning names to things, it is revealed that we must already know something in order to learn by ostension. So we cannot really capture the nature of learning, what the process of learning involves, by simply referring to ostension, because ostension requires that we already know something — Metaphysician Undercover
which in turn leads, once again, to the importance of kinds. In order for ostension to 'work', one must understand what kind of thing is being pointed out by means of ostension. — StreetlightX
Ostensive language-learning works via the learner simply assigning some mental association between what they take to be pointed to and the word in question. — Terrapin Station
So tokens, rather than kinds, in your opinion? Or rather, singular, non-general(izable) things? — StreetlightX
Do you believe that Augustine would have said that learning implies being given something wholesale where the person receiving what was learned is entirely passive in the process? — Terrapin Station
That's conflating the notion of knowing something with the idea of learning a language. — Terrapin Station
No, I believe that Wittgenstein most likely misrepresents Augustine's position . . . — Metaphysician Undercover
Don't you think that this is a valid conflation? — Metaphysician Undercover
First, I'm not saying that ostensive learning of language would amount to "correctly identifying" anything. — Terrapin Station
The learner might think about what's being ostensively presented in terms of kinds, or tokens, or non-generalizable particulars, or anything imaginable. That's just the point. — Terrapin Station
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