...how the world was interpreted when the "timeline" is turned back to 3 billion years ago — Terrapin Station
So I prefer to avoid the inconsistency and say that the uninterpreted, indeterminate conditions during what we call the Mesozoic were such that, if we had been there, we would have seen dinosaurs. I think all we could be arguing over here are two different ways of talking about the same thing. — Janus
I wasn't speaking about "perceiving meaning" but perceiving meaningful things or perceiving things meaningfully. Have you ever perceived anything meaningless? — Janus
You still haven't answered the question: have you ever perceived anything that is meaningless to you ( IE, you didn't know what it is)? — Janus
It's not a matter of thinking about it; — Janus
That the world is always already interpreted means that there is a world to be interpreted. — Banno
You are misunderstanding the different ideas of meaning. I have already explained it; the inherent meaning of things consists in us knowing what they are, which includes but is not limited to knowing what they are called. Animals know what the "affordances" in their environment are without needing names. We don't have to consciously or deliberately name things or think about them as being named for this meaning to be there in the objects themselves. — Janus
The notion that the names of things are somehow in the things is wacky and very wrong. — Terrapin Station
Janus seems now to be arguing that the Mesozoic was interpreted because the dinosaurs interpreted it.
That seems a bit odd to me. — Banno
again it comes down to terminological preferences more than anything else, — Janus
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