Does no one ever read to learn something in your reality? — Metaphysician Undercover
The fact that you are never sure that you learnt it, is the reason why you keep reading more. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm not following your reasoning here, why would never being sure you learnt it advise reading more? In hope some surity might one day come, perhaps? I can perhaps see that in some defined topic with widespread agreement. If I didn't get maths I might well simply continue reading in the hope that one day I get what everyone else seems to have got. But what is it that everyone seems to have got in philosophy? I've reached just about the highest level of 'state-approved' learning it's possible to reach. I'm not sure I've 'got' anything at all. — Isaac
98. On the one hand it is clear that every sentence in our language
'is in order as it is'. That is to say, we are not striving after an ideal,
as if our ordinary vague sentences had not yet got a quite unexceptionable
sense, and a perfect language awaited construction by us.—On the
other hand it seems clear that where there is sense there must be perfect
order.——So there must be perfect order even in the vaguest sentence.
81 ...But here the word "ideal" is liable to mislead, for it sounds as if these languages were better, more perfect ...
You name me a conceivable position one could hold with respect to the current text and I'll find you a professional published philosopher who holds that view. To be honest, the view you personally seem to hold would be about the hardest, Norman Malcom perhaps is closest. — Isaac
The point is it seems to be a quest which the very nature of it admits will never be fulfilled. — Isaac
And how do we know they are 'good' in the absence of having what they say concur with what we already believe (or arrive somewhere we unexpectedly find ourselves comforted by)? What other measure would you use, surely not something as vacuous as 'truth'? — Isaac
So if you don't approach a text with such expectations as I describe, what justification do you have for the belief that an author has something to teach you? Do you think that justification lies outside of your expectations and biases? — Isaac
How did you 'find' this? What sensation caused you to doubt your original beliefs, not their lack of concordance with 'truth' surely (not in Plato at least), for if you already knew what 'truth' was so as to be able to make the comparison you would not have needed to read Plato. — Isaac
Yes, but it is a mode of historical thinking, biographical thinking, not necessarily philosophical thinking. — Isaac
Is Kripke's obviously faulty paraphrasing any less philosophy for the fact that he misrepresented Wittgenstein? — Isaac
If you give even a cursory glance over the secondary literature, you will see that intelligent, well-respected academics have been able to answer all of your questions in just about every conceivable way and virtually none of them agree, leaving you free to choose whichever answer satisfies you. So what are you going to base that choice on if not your existing beliefs? — Isaac
Again, I would ask you how you are making the judgement that the author is worth reading outside of your pre-existing beliefs about what is of value? — Isaac
How would you relate to this? How does Wittgenstein propose to separate "ideal" from "perfect?
81 ...But here the word "ideal" is liable to mislead, for it sounds as if these languages were better, more perfect ...
I would say, that judging by your paragraph above, you would read something, have a vague understanding, despite the possibility of some misunderstanding, and accept your reading as sufficient. Would you call it perfect? — Metaphysician Undercover
I am going to hold off going further with this because it will only take us further from the PI. — Fooloso4
Seeing what is in common. — PI § 72
And what is then to prevent us from viewing it - that is, from using it - only as a sample of irregularity of shape? — PI § 73
Of course, there is such a thing as seeing in this way or that; and there are also cases where whoever sees a sample like this will in
general use it in this way, and whoever sees it otherwise in another way. For example, someone who sees the schematic drawing of a cube as a plane figure consisting of a square and two rhombi will perhaps carry out the order “Bring me something like this!” differently from someone who sees the picture three-dimensionally. — PI § 74
Working in philosophy -- like work in architecture in many respects -- is really more a working on oneself. On one's interpretation. On one's way of seeing things. (And what one expects of them.) — Culture and Value 16
In order to see what various things have in common requires making distinctions and disregarding all other features. — Fooloso4
Seeing is not passive perception, it involves active conception. — Fooloso4
In order to see what various things have in common requires making distinctions and disregarding all other features. — Fooloso4
Note that viewing it in such cases it an activity, a way of using it. — Fooloso4
In some cases looking at it this way rather than that may be wrong, as in the example of when you want someone to bring you a cube, but in other cases it may allow you to see things and thus regard things in a new way, leading to some insight. — Fooloso4
So what do you think Wittgenstein is trying to show with respect to the theme of the book? Where do you think this discussion of 'seeing' is leading? Why bring it up now? What does Wittgenstein want us to do with it? — Isaac
If white turns into black some people say “Essentially it is still the same”. And others, if the colour becomes one degree darker, say “It has changed completely”. — Wittgenstein, Culture and Value 42
Right, so all these descriptions of what 'seeing' really is are perfectly reasonable, but all you've done here is paraphrase them. Yes, things can be seen one way or another, who on earth thought they couldn't? Yes, sometimes seeing things one way can cause problems when you act on that conception, other times it can be quite useful. Again who on earth ever thought that this was not the case? Remember, Wittgenstein is speaking to an audience of highly educated philosophers. — Isaac
You obviously have to don't really think that someone widely credited with being one of the greatest philosophers who have ever lived is thus acclaimed because he provided us with such banal insights as the fact that we sometimes see things one way and sometimes another? — Isaac
So what do you think Wittgenstein is trying to show with respect to the theme of the book? Where do you think this discussion of 'seeing' is leading? Why bring it up now? What does Wittgenstein want us to do with it? — Isaac
I would say that he is leading to 75 from 74. Or else we could accuse him of being out of order. — Metaphysician Undercover
So he asks: "Is this knowledge somehow equivalent to an unformulated definition?" — Metaphysician Undercover
Notice the analogy with how we see things, the other person has an image with sharp boundaries, like clear 20/20 vision, Wittgenstein's is like a person who does not see so well, seeing different colours, but vague boundaries. — Metaphysician Undercover
At 77 he appears to be dismissing the method of Platonic dialectics. — Metaphysician Undercover
Wittgenstein appears to be saying that instead of trying to determine the ideal definition of words like "good", as is the method of Platonic dialectics, we ought to allow a family of meanings, because this is "easier". — Metaphysician Undercover
And yet he points these things out. See, for example, Moore’s position on perception. — Fooloso4
Issues such as “seeing as” and framing are things that “highly educated philosophers” are still discussing. — Fooloso4
The question is premature. — Fooloso4
again it is too early to discuss whether there is one theme or several and what it or they may be. — Fooloso4
But Moore's question is very different. Moore is primarily investigating the relationship between the sense-data and the object surface. In fact he quite frequently makes reference to how difficult the problem of perception judgement actually is. It is to exactly this type of difficulty that Wittgenstein is marshalling what it is that we already know about the ordinary function of this judgment. — Isaac
Exactly. But are ordinary people struggling with their use? — Isaac
The question is premature.
— Fooloso4
Why? — Isaac
again it is too early to discuss whether there is one theme or several and what it or they may be.
— Fooloso4
Again, why? I'm genuinely confused as to what you're trying to do and it's quite difficult to get involved under such seemingly arbitrary restrictions. — Isaac
I am simply pointing to the fact that W. is not introducing the problem of perception out of the blue where others saw no problem. — Fooloso4
We do not all simply see the same thing. — Fooloso4
it is like asking how a musical theme develops in the third movement if we have only heard the first. — Fooloso4
We are reading the book together section by section just as we would when reading it for the first time. For all I know some may be reading it for the first time. Not everyone who follows to topic contributes to it. No doubt the second time through one sees some things differently, but you cannot get there by bypassing the process of reading the text. — Fooloso4
You were specifically defending the concept that what Wittgenstein says in these passages is in some way elucidatory. — Isaac
That requires a defence that others have been labouring with the actual concept you're claiming he is clarifying, and I don't see that in Moore. — Isaac
But my question was not "is this the case?", my question was "does anyone seriously think it isn't?". — Isaac
The point here, is that which Wittgenstein comes to around 89 on, that the problem is in part that we should think anything queer is going on here. That metaphysical propositions have the character they do often only because they sound queer, not because they are. — Isaac
But in what examination of music does anyone make any comment at all after only hearing the first. — Isaac
In what form of musical exegesis do we pause after the first chords to say "well, here are some musical notes played one after the other, but let's say no more for now"? — Isaac
OK, so all that is about reading the text, but we are not here and now reading it are we? — Isaac
There is no one thing that all things that have something in common have. Making distinctions is not the one thing that seeing what things have in common have in common. — Fooloso4
See the second case in § 72, the shapes and shades of leafs in §73, and other examples where we see what things have in common despite their differences. Do we see a dog and a horse or cow as the same or different? In some respects we can see them as the same and in others as different. They do have a lot in common. — Fooloso4
It's not as if the concept is just a definition to which we have yet to put words though. He's saying that that our ability to apply the unspecified definition is entirely and exhaustively what constitutes it. — Isaac
75 What does it mean to know what a game is? What does it
mean, to know it and not be able to say it? Is this knowledge somehow
equivalent to an unformulated definition? So that if it were
formulated I should be able to recognize it as the expression of my
knowledge? Isn't my knowledge, my concept of a game, completely
expressed in the explanations that I could give?
No, this is not a good analogy because it still implies that there is something there to be seen that the blurred image is hiding from the unfocused gaze. What Wittgenstein is saying here is that often there is no hidden shape, the edges appear blurred because they actually are blurred, they remain undefined because no definition seems required for them to function. In fact they may well be more useful blurred as they are. — Isaac
I don't see any evidence that Wittgenstein is taking this route because he thinks it is "easier". He's taking this route because he feels the dialectic process has caused more problems than it has solved. What meanings are now clear to us, that were previously clouded, as a result of the application of the Platonic dialectic method? — Isaac
Then it will be easier for you to see that the word must have a family of meanings.
Right, so if we see dogs and horses and cows all as animals, we see them as the same, animals. But I think that this is not a very precise or accurate way of seeing them, because it is a matter of overlooking all the differences between them, and seeing them all as the same, animals. — Metaphysician Undercover
I mentioned Moore only because you asked why he would bring up such things to an audience of highly educated philosophers, as if it were odd that highly educated philosophers would even consider such obvious things. — Fooloso4
When thinking about it they may acknowledge that there may be more than one way of looking at it — Fooloso4
don’t see what metaphysical propositions have to do with the passages being discussed or anything I have said. — Fooloso4
That is the point. We don’t. And yet that is what you want to do here. — Fooloso4
If you do not approve of this approach then why do you keep coming back just to complain about it? — Fooloso4
The only answer I could think of was that you thought his summary in that section (that we see things differently in different circumstances) was itself the conclusion of philosophical interest — Isaac
Literally the entire book is about how we deal with metaphysical propositions. I think I'm starting to understand why we might be at such odds over this. — Isaac
Yes, we don't because we don't make any comments at all. — Isaac
The name 'Moses' can be defined by means of various descriptions.
What there has been a lot of from you is arguing about how we should be doing this and how we should be relying on the secondary literature. It is a waste of time and I am not going to indulge you any longer. — Fooloso4
All this, however, can only appear in the right light when one has
attained greater clarity about the concepts of understanding, meaning,
and thinking. For it will then also become clear what can lead us (and
did lead me) to think that if anyone utters a sentence and means or
understands it he is operating a calculus according to definite rules. — Philosophical Investigations, trans. Anscombe, ed. 3
All this, however, can appear in the right light only when one has
attained greater clarity about the concepts of understanding, meaning
something, and thinking. For it will then also become clear what may
mislead us (and did mislead me) into thinking that if anyone utters a
sentence and means or understands it, he is thereby operating a calculus
according to definite rules. — Philosophical Investigations, trans. Anscombe, Hacker, Schulte, ed. 4
And the clue is in the fact that Witty says the seeing-as does not imply seeing differently; — StreetlightX
Witty aims to once again 'de-interiorize' perception - just as he did with the memory-image in §56/57. Just as, in §56/57, the importance of the memory-image had to do with its role in a langauge-game, so too does perception's importance come out in the role it also plays in an economy of use: — StreetlightX
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.