1. In what ways can we ''improve'' our language (the current state of our language may be already perfect)? — TheMadFool
3. Can anyone prove/disprove that language can never remove ALL confusion? — TheMadFool
One thing to consider is that the "imperfections" in language make it more efficient, they increase the information density at the cost of errors. The human brain, for all it's impressive computing power, relies on a number of shortcuts and guesses to operate at the speed necessary for it's survival. Language reflects this. Errors are a price we pay in order to have practical language that can transmit information effectively. — Echarmion
According to What Is Lojban?, the language's grammatical structures are "defined by a set of rules that have been tested to be unambiguous using computers", which is called the "machine grammar". Hence the characteristics of the standard syntactic (not semantic) constructs in Lojban:
• each word has exactly one grammatical interpretation;
• the words relate grammatically to each other in exactly one way.
So I would losing the notion of "all about." — Arne
"Hot" and "having a high degree of heat or a high temperature" or "hot" and <pointing at a glowing coil on a stove> or anything like that don't amount to anything--there's not even any way to make a connection between the two things--without thinking about them, and thinking about them in order to make a connection between them (which therefore isn't identical to the two things), can be more variable than the number of people there are and the number of occasions that they think associatively about the two things.
And because thinking about such things isn't identical to sounds or gestures etc. we can make, we can't avoid the variability in question. So we can't arrive at the sort of "solution" that some people would consider "perfect — Terrapin Station
A simple example of how inner experience can be variable while we don't have any problem with language despite that fact is with the old "inverted spectrum" idea.
If your experience of red is rather what my experience of green is like, and vice versa, that makes no difference in us being able to say "hand me the red color swatch," where the other person hands us the swatch we expect. Re their inner experience, they call "red," while we call * "red."
What we go by is whether behavior, including other linguistic utterances, makes sense to us. (And part of that is that we develop our meanings to make sense of the behavior we observe.) As long as that's going okay--although often enough it does not--we figure that things are kosher, and it doesn't really matter what differences may be taking place internally, in other persons' minds--such as them experiencing red as we experience green. — Terrapin Station
The point is there has to be some form of correspondence or agreement just as in in your example we see colors differently BUT the difference is uniform and so doesn't cause confusion. Anyway the issue you raise is in the realm of the impossible. Given that, in very simplistic terms, we all bleed when cut there's very little reason to suspect that there's such variability as you drscribe. — TheMadFool
I agree.What we go by is whether behavior, including other linguistic utterances, makes sense to us. (And part of that is that we develop our meanings to make sense of the behavior we observe.) As long as that's going okay--although often enough it does not--we figure that things are kosher, and it doesn't really matter what differences may be taking place internally, in other persons' minds--such as them experiencing red as we experience green. — Terrapin Station
Although there often is confusion, misunderstanding, etc. We see it here all the time. — Terrapin Station
What do you mean by 'a productive conversation' ?
Suppose we take the cynical view that 'philosophy is merely mental recreation for those of us fortunate to have time on our hands', how would you measure 'productive'...'killing time' ?
My point is that 'conversation' (whether internal or social) can only be deemed 'useful' with respect to deciding subsequent action, or giving 'reassurance', in specific contexts — fresco
But a more general point with respect to the OP is that 'confusion' is contextually dealt with involving negotiations of limitation of 'meaning'... not by attempting the futile task of trying to use words to define words. — fresco
Can anyone prove/disprove that language can never remove ALL confusion? — TheMadFool
Nevertheless what I've noticed is there's "progress" in the discussions I see around here. — TheMadFool
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