What the child has learnt is not 'just' a set of words, but a whole life-context as it were. As Pitkin writes, the child "looked at language and looked at the world and looked back and forth... And the 'world' it looked at was not just a collection of objects... [but] included people, and their feelings and actions, and consequences". And this, understandably, is precisely the kind of thing A.I. can struggle with. — StreetlightX
Explain yourself. — StreetlightX
Hanna Pitkin relates a charming little story which I think that alot to teach us about how language works, and in a way that questions some of our usual approaches to the subject. — StreetlightX
To be sure, Trump is ‘telling it like it is’ for those who believe what he says. For those who disagree with his views, the ‘like it is’ is a racist, fascist, Islamophobic, narrow-minded, and essentially false perception of reality. — Halim Shebaya
And the 'world' it looked at was not just a collection of objects... [but] included people, and their feelings and actions, and consequences". And this, understandably, is precisely the kind of thing A.I. can struggle with. — StreetlightX
how language works, and in a way that questions some of our usual approaches to the subject. — StreetlightX
Lovely story but I'm not sure that it teaches us anything we didn't know already.
A child learns to speak by imitation. Echoing. Parroting. — Amity
A child learns to speak by imitation. Echoing. Parroting. — Amity
But this is not a case of that. The whole trust of the story is that the child has used the phrase in a new way, one that specifically doesn't simply parrot the parent. — StreetlightX
Well, I believe that the child understands the context of the word "function" by the verbal tone/pitch and whatnot along with the intension of the speech act by her mother in the story. — Wallows
But how does that get turned into understanding? After-all, neither a [arrot nor current AI can make that transition. What is about human children that imitation leads to them learning how to use words? — Marchesk
how language works, and in a way that questions some of our usual approaches to the subject.
— StreetlightX
What are our usual approaches to the subject ? — Amity
an imitation or copying of the behaviour and context in which the parent used it. — Amity
But what they're really soaking up is how to live in the context of people speaking, and the words and grammar are less important than the linguistic acts (in whatever form) that can be repeated and / or reformulated... in order to master the function that needs to be mastered. — Baden
But it isn't a copying of the context. Or rather, it is a projection of the context; a decision made that this context is the same as the other context, itself a novelty. — StreetlightX
Anyway, just wanted to write something up about the story and draw out a couple of possibly interesting implications. — StreetlightX
As I read your post and then all the follow ups, I kept thinking about it from the other direction - the process you're describing is how the little girl learns the meaning of "function." — T Clark
As I read your post and then all the follow ups, I kept thinking about it from the other direction - the process you're describing is how the little girl learns the meaning of "function." — T Clark
What are our usual approaches to the subject ? — Amity
How does the term 'function' function for our precocious three year old girl? Perhaps "function" means "I want it" and she is not going to give it up. — Fooloso4
As I read your post and then all the follow ups, I kept thinking about it from the other direction - the process you're describing is how the little girl learns the meaning of "function." — T Clark
I think one way to think of what I consider a common and usual approach is to consider meaning primarily a matter of definition. To have a meaning is to be defined, as it were. I think one of the things the example brings out is the inadequacy of that model: I don't think our three year old would be able to define 'function', if asked. Nonetheless, she means something by it, or rather, she means something by her manner of employing it among a wider constellation of actions (a sad face, a whine in her tone, a stiffened grip on the blanket). — StreetlightX
..Like the other views discussed here, the view that meaning is a product of social norms of this sort has a long history; it is particularly associated with the work of the later Wittgenstein and his philosophical descendants. (See especially Wittgenstein 1953.)
An important defender of this sort of view is Robert Brandom. On Brandom’s view, a sentence’s meaning is due to the conditions, in a given society, under which it is correct or appropriate to perform various speech acts involving the sentence.
— Jeff Speaks
How does the term 'function' function for our precocious three year old girl? Perhaps "function" means "I want it" and she is not going to give it up. — Fooloso4
What is surprising here ? — Amity
we don't necessarily need to know what's going on with every single word in order to use a word: — StreetlightX
...language is also not something learnt atomistically, 'built up' out of a set of sets of discrete definitions which are then put together. — StreetlightX
The most well-known theory about language acquisition is the nativist theory, which suggests that we are born with something in our genes that allows us to learn language...
The Interactionist approach claims that if our language ability develops out of a desire to communicate, then language is dependent upon whom we want to communicate with. This means the environment you grow up in will heavily affect how well and how quickly you learn to talk...
It’s important to keep in mind that theories of language acquisition are just ideas created by researchers to explain their observations. How accurate these theories are to the real world is debatable. Language acquisition is a complicated process influenced by the genetics of an individual as well as the environment they live in.
I think one way to think of what I consider a common and usual approach is to consider meaning primarily a matter of definition. To have a meaning is to be defined, as it were. I think one of the things the example brings out is the inadequacy of that model: I don't think our three year old would be able to define 'function', if asked. — StreetlightX
But if you think of "meaning" in this way, as something which is attributed to words, you would have to accept that we can use words without knowing the meaning of the words. How would we characterize this type of use then? The child gets some sort of message across to the parents, but we cannot call it "meaning", because the child doesn't know the meaning. What is the child doing? — Metaphysician Undercover
Another thing this implies is that 'to know the meaning of the word 'function'', (to define it?) is not the same as being able to use the word meaningfully (although the latter is how one goes about learning the former, as you said). — StreetlightX
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