As I pointed out way back, if by "learning" we don't mean that odd notion that has it that one is given something wholesale where the person receiving it is entirely passive in the process--and Augustine surely isn't using "learning" that way, and neither am I, then I don't agree with Wittgenstein that learning a language can not be done via ostension. — Terrapin Station
That's not what I'm referring to. I'm referring to the fact that conventionally, "learning" doesn't connote being given something wholesale where the person receiving it was entirely passive in the process. It rather connotes something where the learner was an active participant, where learning necessarily involved them thinking about what they're hearing, etc. — Terrapin Station
But since some aspects of language use are required, as already known, for ostensive learning to proceed — Metaphysician Undercover
You agree that the student must already know how to do something, in order for ostension to be successful. — Metaphysician Undercover
I disagree with that claim — Terrapin Station
They have to be able to observe and they have to be able to make a mental association between things like the sound the demonstrator is making and what the demonstrator is pointing to. That doesn't require that the person has a language already.
Just where do you believe that a language prerequisite is entering the scenario, and why do you believe that? — Terrapin Station
I didn't agree that they have to know anything about any language.We already agreed on this, that the student must already know how to do some different things, for ostension to be successful. I believe you called it mental activity. This aspect of language use, which you called mental activity is not learned through ostension because it is required for ostension. Why disagree now? — Metaphysician Undercover
Teaching/learning refers to the activities of both the teacher and the student. To say that the activities of the student are something additional to learning/being taught is to not undertand the terms teaching/learning.My claim is that in order for a person to use a language, it is necessary that the person know something which cannot be taught through ostension. — Metaphysician Undercover
I didn't agree that they have to know anything about any language. — Terrapin Station
Teaching/learning refers to the activities of both the teacher and the student. To say that the activities of the student are something additional to learning/being taught is to not undertand the terms teaching/learning. — Terrapin Station
I think I already stated that it helps to make explicit what W means when he talks about “language.” — I like sushi
It's not a matter of knowing anything about any language. That's not what we've been discussing, you're changing the subject. A person can know how to use language without knowing anything about any language. — Metaphysician Undercover
Does anyone disagree with what Wittgenstein is arguing, that it is impossible to learn language solely through ostension? — Metaphysician Undercover
W then goes on to mention something of symbolism and categories (yet I don’t think he explicitly says “categories”?) when talking of colour, shape and number (23 - ref. to language/words as “tools”, 28, 29 to 35 - talk about numbers, colours and shapes). — I like sushi
Keep in mind what is implied in the analogy at #2 #3, that a game is a type of activity which consists of sub-classifications, different types of games such as board games, etc.. Language is a type of activity which is sub-classed into activities such as those mentioned at #23. The act of "questioning" therefore is to proceed with a type of activity which is a sub-class of the overall classification of a type of activity called "language". Thus it is a particular type of language-game within the category of "language-game", like a board game is a particular type of game within the category of "game".24. If you do not keep the multiplicity of language-games in view
you will perhaps be inclined to ask questions like: "What is a question?"
I don't agree that having some of "what Wittgenstein means by 'language'" is necessary prior to learning language via ostension.
I suppose we could load "what Wittgenstein means by 'language'" in a way that it might matter, although the contortions needed for that might make it so that we might as well say "what Wittgenstein means by 'language being a necessary prerequisite'" in a manner that, if carried through wholesale for everyone, for everything they say, would disable ever taking issue with anyone about anything.
"Oh, well what Charles Manson meant by 'curing society' . . ." and so on. — Terrapin Station
The answer is yes, I disagree that it's impossible to learn language solely through ostension.
That the student knows or does something that's not itself language, prior to learning language via ostension, is irrelevant to the question. The question isn't whether it's impossible to learn or do any arbitrary thing that one might know/do only via learning language through ostension. — Terrapin Station
So when you dismiss what is necessary for ostensive learning, as irrelevant to ostensive learning, — Metaphysician Undercover
The word "language" for Wittgenstein does not refer to a thing which you can point to and say "that is language". It refers to a type of thing, — Metaphysician Undercover
It's irrelevant to learning language. — Terrapin Station
Re the counting analogy, it's the same as saying that the student can learn to count to ten without already knowing how to count to ten. — Terrapin Station
If you wanted to ask, "Is it possible to learn how to count to ten without knowing how to count to five first," you'd need to actually ask that. — Terrapin Station
If you want to argue that it's not possible to ostensively learn language, you'd have to say what one can't learn ostensively that is language. — Terrapin Station
Your comments in the following section are an incoherent mess, but I'm trying to avoid some other big tangent: — Terrapin Station
As necessary for ostensive definition, it is necessary for learning language. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's false, counting to five is something other than counting to ten. — Metaphysician Undercover
Can you not read? I stated that as a true proposition: "one must first count to five before counting to ten". If you doubt the truth of this proposition, and want to ask if it's possible to learn how to count to ten without first learning how to count to five, and challenge the soundness of my argument, then be my guest. Perhaps you might make a case. — Metaphysician Undercover
There are specific mental activities which are required to be performed by the student in order that the student may learn by ostensive learning. These cannot be learned by ostension. But they are a part of language, just like counting to five is a part of counting to ten. — Metaphysician Undercover
No one is claiming "that is language". You clearly misunderstand what Wittgenstein means by "language". It is not a thing you can point to and say "that is language". "Language" is a word which refers to a certain type of human activity, with a multitude of sub-types, just like "game" is such a word. — Metaphysician Undercover
Right, you're trying to avoid the point which Wittgenstein is making, — Metaphysician Undercover
No, it's irrelevant to the question of whether you can learn language ostensively that the student is doing non-linguistic things mentally, because "learning language ostensively" doesn't imply that the student is NOT doing non-linguistic things mentally. — Terrapin Station
We're not saying something so stupid as, say, "One has to be conscious to use language. Therefore consciousness is part of language, and one doesn't learn how to be conscious ostensively. Thus, language can't be learned ostensively," are we? Because as I noted, that would be really, really stupid. — Terrapin Station
It is only a mistake if one thinks that the assertion consists of two actions, entertaining and asserting (assigning the truth-value, or something of the kind), and that in
performing these actions we follow the prepositional sign roughly as we sing from the musical score. Reading the written sentence loud or soft is indeed comparable with singing from a musical score, but 'meaning (thinking) the sentence that is read is not.
That's nonsense, as a necessary part of language this cannot be said to be "non-linguistic". — Metaphysician Undercover
Why is that stupid? — Metaphysician Undercover
Again, only in the trollish way that consciousness is "linguistic." — Terrapin Station
Perhaps you ought to simply participate and contribute rather than proliferating reading groups and readings which you don't commit yourself to. — StreetlightX
I've committed myself to the reading groups that I started, which are the Naming and Necessity one by Kripke, and The World as Will and Representation Vol. I by Schopenhauer. I just progress slowly on reading those books as I tend to analyze things in a slow and laborious fashion. I don't like how we are progressing with this current reading group. My preference would be to have a companion, such as Marie McGinn's, The Routledge Guidebook to Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations and have that supplement whatever questions may arise.
I don't have much to contribute to this discussion, and since I'm not the leader of this reading group I don't feel compelled to post anything or direct how we go about addressing each part of the book. — Wallows
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Wittgenstein's Philosophical In - Arif Ahmed
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Routledge Philosophy Guidebook to Wittgens - Marie McGinn
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Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigation - David G. Stern
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