I've noticed from time to time that some posters on this forum misunderstand that the contemporary meaning of "proposition" is not Bob's speech. It's that thing that Jim grasped after aligning himself with Bob's frame of reference. — frank
I'll posit that what Magritte said wouldn't make any sense if we didn't understand what it means for a person to express his or her thoughts. But how does that work? — frank
Which is that, as an example, a painting of a weeping women does express grief. That the ‘proposition’ is not necessary? — Brett
Propositionless communication is what I was thinking of. — frank
I've noticed from time to time that some posters on this forum misunderstand that the contemporary meaning of "proposition" is not Bob's speech. It's that thing that Jim grasped after aligning himself with Bob's frame of reference. — frank
I suppose some looks from my wife are propositionless — Coben
Language elicits experiences. At least that's one way of looking at language. I think in a way you are in the areas of Reddy's conduit metaphor for language, which goes into hidden folk theories of language where it is a conduit, a container for knowledge rather than something that can, but does not necessarily, elicit certain thoughts in the other person. — Coben
Magritte said that a painting of a weeping face does not express grief. — frank
What's the propositionless version of Bob and Jim's story? Is it similar to what Magritte was saying? — frank
IOW, understanding the expression of another requires some spontaneous anthropology. — frank
"Thoughts" is problematic - for me.Bob speaks or writes in order to express his thoughts. — frank
Isn't the idea here that art, perhaps to count as art in the first place, amounts to not taking things in their literal, everyday, mundane senses? — Terrapin Station
We're intellectual, emotional, and bodily. Feeling is important, but can't cover all.
Thoughts" is problematic - for me.
— tim wood — frank
I'm taking thinking as being propositional. If that's all it is, then I don't suppose there is any propositionless version. I do buy propositionless emotional and bodily experience. Thus so far. Is there more you want to develop out of this?speaks or writes in order to express his thoughts. — frank
We should not understand his words literally.Magritte said that a painting of a weeping face does not express grief. To believe so, he thought, would be as naive as believing that a cake expresses what the baker was thinking when she created it. — frank
I hadn't heard of that. A proposition is an abstract object, though. It has no location. — frank
Sometimes, too, art is just about the act of creation itself, and its effects on the audience/viewer are of secondary concern. Think of playing with toys and inventing worlds as a kid, even though no one was recording. Or also think of being a kid and finding another kid who had a way of doing make believe that totally sucked you in.
But then I feel art probably doesn't have an essence, so there's also a message-conveying way of looking at it and also a behavior-eliciting way and also a perception-inducing way and a patronage-securing way and a self-marketing way and a smuggling-reflexivity-into-the-gallery way and a virtuosic way and a self-differnentiating-to-secure-identity way etc. — csalisbury
We should not understand his words literally.
Magritte’s entire project was about the deconstruction of the ordinary, conventional perceptions and the building of a new frame of reference, where visible, ostensible, and sayable would function differently. — Number2018
Imo there are emotional experiences and bodily experiences. Imo these are different from intellectual experiences, that I here call thinking. Off hand I cannot think of any thinking I can do that is not propositional - maybe some guidance?I'm taking thinking as being propositional.
— tim wood
Is it? Do you mean thinking is a sequence of propositions? — frank
More on smuggling reflexivity into the gallery? — frank
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