The Great Whatever
but that truth-telling isn't important. Is there empirical evidence that it is? — mcdoodle
invizzy
All complete theories have partial theories embedded in them. It has to be that way if you think the phenomena are at all diverse. — The Great Whatever
invizzy
The Great Whatever
Janus
Janus
The Great Whatever
Janus
discoii
Well, if you consider things like programming languages to be modeled based on human language (which they are), then there is the equivalent of "hello" in programming languages, which are things like code for signals waiting to receive data. This is similar to humans when they say "hello", which is to signify that they would like to exchange data of some sort, be it actual conversation, or even acknowledgement of the other person as being a part of a societal context.This sounds reasonable at first glance; but I am not convinced 'hello' has a linguistic meaning.
The Great Whatever
This sounds reasonable at first glance; but I am not convinced 'hello' has a linguistic meaning. — John
The Great Whatever
The Great Whatever
linguistic (which I take to mean 'concrete') — John
The Great Whatever
Janus
But I would say that clearly, 'linguistic' means 'having to do with language,' not 'concrete.' — The Great Whatever
The Great Whatever
For me, if a sentence counts as having a linguistic meaning then the meaning can be given in concrete terms, which means it can be translated. — John
I actually don't think words have meanings at all — John
S
Janus
unenlightened
Ok, 'hello' can be translated, or at least has it's equivalent functors in other languages or in English. But it does not refer to anything specific. — John
Janus
S
That seems to support the thesis that meaning does not require reference, but only function. — unenlightened
On the other hand, my old buggy buddy here can only be understood, it seems to me, as referring to a leaf. A one word language of camouflage? Or perhaps one could better say that reference does not require language either? — unenlightened
The Great Whatever
I don't think words can be considered to be the units of linguistic meaning, because a word by itself has no particular context. — John
Baden
I don't think words can be considered to be the units of linguistic meaning, because a word by itself has no particular context. — John
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