And this parallels the gradual internalisation of the social to the inner voice whose self-sedimentation obscures the nature of its origin. That voice being the substrate from which said concepts speak. — Baden
The relation of thought to word is not a thing but a process, a continual movement back and forth from thought to word and from word to thought. In that process the relation of thought to word undergoes changes that themselves may be regarded as development in the functional sense. Thought is not merely expressed in words; it comes into existence through them. Every thought tends to connect something with something else, to establish a relation between things. Every thought moves, grows and develops, fulfills a function, solves a problem. This flow of thought occurs as inner movement through a series of planes. An analysis of the interaction of thought and world must begin with an investigation of the different phases and planes a thought traverses before it is embodied in words. — Vygotsky
Self-sedimenting of inner voice' - that sounds murky.
What do you mean by this? — Amity
Ah, it's eating me inside that I've not yet read Vygotsky. — StreetlightX
Or yet another revision: words don't mean things; we mean things by way of words. — StreetlightX
So these people are trying to create a division between this type of meaning and that type of meaning, without any supportive principles to show that one supposed "type" is actually different from the other. In reality, the meaning which a defined word has is no different from the meaning which a piece of art has, which is no different from the meaning which a beautiful sunset has. — Metaphysician Undercover
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
Doesn't knowing the meaning of a word really mean knowing how to use it appropriately? — T Clark
The little girl used it appropriately. — T Clark
But about which we are nonetheless happy to strive to agree. — bongo fury
Thought is not merely expressed in words; it comes into existence through them. — Vygotsky
Thought is not merely expressed in words; it comes into existence through them. — Vygotsky
Rubbish.
Some. Certainly. Most. Certainly. Not all. It takes pre-existing thought to learn words/language. — creativesoul
My father once said to me "Michael, behave." in a somber and serious, but not at all angry, voice. I was around three to three and a half. I answered, "I am being have". Pronounce that with a long "A" not short, as in "behave". I had drawn correlations, associations, and/or connections between being good and behaving. Being have was being good.
That wasn't parroting. It was a misuse of language, but perfectly understandable. — creativesoul
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.
https://www.khanacademy.org/test-prep/mcat/processing-the-environment/language/a/theories-of-the-early-stages-of-language-acquisition — Amity
Via Vygotsky:
“Every function in the child’s cultural development appears twice: first, on the social level, and later, on the individual level; first, between people (interpsychological) and then inside the child (intrapsychological). — Baden
I am going to follow this piece of advice, from website: — Amity
So, it's rubbish but it's certainly mostly true? You seem to be having trouble with the concept 'rubbish'. Perhaps some thought would help. Your posts are confused strawmen based on taking one sentence out of context and mangling it. — Baden
OK, cool, I was just clarifying that you weren't claiming that knowing how to use the word entailed having the ability to say what the word means.
Nice example too! — Janus
I mean if you had even bothered looking at this on the same page:
"The relation of thought to word is not a thing but a process, a continual movement back and forth from thought to word and from word to thought"
Your whole criticism falls to pieces. — Baden
The advice goes without saying. What it often comes down to is which theory is least inconsistent with the observable facts of language learning. — Baden
And this parallels the gradual internalisation of the social to the inner voice whose self-sedimentation obscures the nature of its origin. That voice being the substrate from which said concepts speak. — Baden
In the context of the discussion, I want to say: yes he does. He knows what time is. As we all do. But he's missing the additional skill of being able to say what it's meaning is, which requires more knowledge, something extra. — StreetlightX
But it took until Einstein before time was known as part of the four spacetime dimensions. And it took a knowledge of entropy and cosmology to understand f the arrow of time (somewhat). There's a possibility that we live in a frozen block universe where all points in time exist, and the passage of time is just an experience our brains create. — Marchesk
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