Thinking in retrospect, it might perhaps be better to characterize this as as naturalism of language, rather than a realism. But I suppose this is more provocative and fun, knowing our little crop of posters. — StreetlightX
By language I mean the stuff we are taught in English class in primary school, having to do with words, sentences, grammar and the like (as distinct from say, 'body language' - although we will complicate this later) — StreetlightX
I don't think rooting language back in the world again will help. You'll just get more dumb correlationist paradoxes. I think it would be better to work through language's logic from the inside, ironically, until it can be systematically untangled, and allow the world to collapse with it. No more realism or naturalism then. — The Great Whatever
I don't think rooting language back in the world again will help. You'll just get more dumb correlationist paradoxes. I think it would be better to work through language's logic from the inside, ironically, until it can be systematically untangled, and allow the world to collapse with it. No more realism or naturalism then. — The Great Whatever
I'd say that the way language is supposed to work, it pretends to have a kind of transcendental function that circumscribes the limits of the world — The Great Whatever
Thinking in retrospect, it might perhaps be better to characterize this as a naturalism of language, rather than a realism. — StreetlightX
whereas philosophers have been inclined to think that natural language mimics ideal logic forms, often imperfectly, I now believe that logical systems are basically crude, toy semantics, abstracted from the living complexity of natural semantics, which we're only now beginning to study seriously... At this stage reflections on the interface between linguistic semantics and non-linguistic semantics are still in their infancy. — The Great Whatever
What if meaning exceeds the bounds of language, as it so regularly does with respect to gestures, body language, and even - if the phenomenologists are right - perception? — StreetlightX
Instead, the production of meaning bleeds beyond the bounds of language and spills over into world from the very beginning. — StreetlightX
which is something I think the phenomenologists have understood for a long time, although without ever framing their investigations in terms of semantics — StreetlightX
Actually @Michael, @Aaron R is on point here, which is that once you include 'non-linguistic components' within the ambit of the linguistic, any hard and fast metaphysical distinction between the two becomes impossible to sustain. — StreetlightX
In other words, how can the proposed theory explain what it is to talk about non-linguistic processes of meaning production if the meaning that is produced in, say, perceptual contexts transcends the meaning produced in linguistic contexts? — Aaron R
but you can't have 'ungrammatical' perceptions. — The Great Whatever
↪The Great Whatever "Socratic irony" should have a more modern name. Perhaps "malicious bracketing?" :P — Pneumenon
Rather, I'd like to ask: "How do you communicate the stuff that's left after the collapse of language?" — Pneumenon
I seem to remember you saying that people can't relate to one another meaningfully. Is this an example of that? — Pneumenon
A word about normativity: the notion that language-use (and even perception) has a normative dimension doesn't seem to be too popular on this forum, but I can't see how it can be avoided. To make a claim is to implicitly have a stake in the specification of how things "ought" to be done. Not only can we make claims, but we can make claims (argue) about claiming (arguing) itself - that is, about how we "ought" to argue or make claims. So why does this matter? It matters because, in accordance with Hume's law, I don't think that the normative dimension of language-use can be naturalized, ever. If this is correct, then language (syntax, semantics, prgamatics) cannot be fully naturalized, ever. And that's where I tend to think that we simply cannot avoid developing something like a transcendental account of thought/language, as much as we might wish to avoid it. — Aaron R
1. You seem very keen to avoid leveraging the concept of representation, and I wonder if the abandonment of this concept is strictly necessary. I wonder if we can resurrect a servicable account of representation on the back of something like your concept of significance (i.e. representation as a species of differential meaning). Why would we want to do this? My worry is that if we abandon the concept of representation then we have to abandon anything like a correspondence theory of truth. Now, you're probably thinking that this is exactly what we should do because the correspondence theory of truth is a lost cause, but I'm not convinced that this is the right move for anyone who wishes to defend a genuine metaphysical realism (but perhaps you don't(?)).
More on the correspondence theory of truth: I'm not suggesting that we ought to try to explain truth entirely in terms of correspondence. We can make true statements about fictional entities like Harry Potter, and we wouldn't want to try to cash out the truth of those statements in ontological terms. I tend to think that the theory of truth needs to be split across ontological and semantic dimensions. So the semantic dimension deals with what it is for a claim to be correct - to satisfy certain norms of discourse - and then we can identify a subset of claims where the norms governing their correctness dictate that we cash that correctness out in ontological terms (e.g. in successful representation). This is, perhaps, where we could appeal to something like Terry Deacon's dynamical theory of representation, which roots it in a specific, 'substrate-independent' dynamical form (i.e. teleodynamics) to explain what it is for one process/state to represent another. I'm still digesting Deacon so at this point I can't say that I completely endorse his account, but I think it seems promising (as do some others that I have encountered). — Aaron R
2. A word about normativity: the notion that language-use (and even perception) has a normative dimension doesn't seem to be too popular on this forum, but I can't see how it can be avoided. To make a claim is to implicitly have a stake in the specification of how things "ought" to be done. Not only can we make claims, but we can make claims (argue) about claiming (arguing) itself - that is, about how we "ought" to argue or make claims. So why does this matter? It matters because, in accordance with Hume's law, I don't think that the normative dimension of language-use can be naturalized, ever. If this is correct, then language (syntax, semantics, prgamatics) cannot be fully naturalized, ever. And that's where I tend to think that we simply cannot avoid developing something like a transcendental account of thought/language, as much as we might wish to avoid it. — Aaron R
When I say rather than metaphysical though, I mean that I don't really share your concern that a correspondence theory of truth is needed to secure metaphysical realism. I think that once you've relativized the status of language as a mere regional aspect of the world, there no reason to try and secure realism within language. There's no reason, in other words, why realism should be dependent on the vicissitudes of an empirical phenomenon developed amongst some highly evolved apes on a small corner of the universe. — StreetlightX
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