It's a deficient "same" though. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think Witty talks about the origin of usage; — god must be atheist
usage is different from the origin of usage.
The origin of usage is using a word in a particular way, — god must be atheist
In my opinion Witty lacked the insight of accepting the status quo of language. He delved into apparent contradictions of language, and he conveniently ignored the social and cultural reconciliatory practices that eliminated the contradictions. — god must be atheist
Only if you hold "same" to the impossible standard that requires another person be in precisely the same place and time (and mind?) in order to replicate your usage. Nobody besides a misguided philosopher would ever use the word "same" in this way about meaning or use. — Luke
We often speak of synonyms having the same meaning without requiring your impossible standard of sameness. — Luke
That's just not how the word is commonly used, especially when describing linguistic meaning. — Luke
Don't be absurd, this is the "same" which is defined by the law of identity. It was stated by Aristotle as a means of expelling sophism from philosophy. — Metaphysician Undercover
If we say that there is a "way of using" a word, then the generalization is intrinsic to this concept, "way of using". What would validate a "way of using", if not some faulty assumption that X (a particular instance of use) is the same as Y (a particular instance of use)? — Metaphysician Undercover
It's a shame that your use of the word "same" cannot be identical to Aristotle's definition, by your own argument, since he lived so long ago. — Luke
Of course my instance of using "same" is not the same as Aristotle's, that's exactly the point, and it's quite obvious according to how "same" is defined by the law of identity — Metaphysician Undercover
That’s all a very good point. I had not considered any of that in context of meaning is use until your earlier post. Same sort of generalization issue also crops up for the phrase language games. If they’re all unique, then how does Witty genaralize to one phrase? — Marchesk
It seems that difference and similarity are fundamental to human cognition and recognition, and are therefore not explicable in more basic terms. All explications rely on the cognition and recognition of difference and similarity, otherwise we could say nothing about anything, and then there would be no use or meaning. — Janus
A definition of the law of identity gives its meaning, yet it is your claim that no two meanings are the same or that we can ever be sure that they are the same, since agreement in ways of use are non-existent, and we can at best have only similar but not the same ways of use. — Luke
Therefore, how can you use the law of identity as a law or a standard of sameness when the agreement of use is non-existent? You cannot be using it the same way as anybody else, including Aristotle, by your own argument. There is no such thing as the "same" because you have made it an impossible standard. — Luke
I don't suppose you have any specific references, other than his entire body of work? — Luke
A definition of the law of identity gives its meaning, yet it is your claim that no two meanings are the same or that we can ever be sure that they are the same, since agreement in ways of use are non-existent, and we can at best have only similar but not the same ways of use. — Luke
And being similar is distinct from being the same. Is this difficult for you to understand? — Metaphysician Undercover
I never said that agreements in ways of use are non-existent. I said that such generalizations about ways of use come about through retrospection. I do not deny the existence of generalizations, nor do I deny agreements in ways of use. — Metaphysician Undercover
I use a word in one way, you use it in a similar way, and for the sake of simplicity we assume that we are using it in the same way. This, saying that it is "the same way", is the agreement which bongo said that we strive for. If you and I say that we will use, or do use, the word in the same way, then we have agreement. [...] In reality, we use words in similar ways, without any agreements. [...] The agreement is non-existent. — Metaphysician Undercover
I was making an opinion on Wittgenstein's entire work, and not making an opinion on a specific quote or passage in his works. — god must be atheist
Well, it's my "reasoned opinion" that you are completely wrong about Wittgenstein. — Luke
I accept your disagreement, but I see no reason accompanying your opinion. — god must be atheist
What you seem to fail to understand is that similarity is not a concept sufficient to substitute in all uses of 'same'. "Two dogs are the same kind of animal"; I cannot substitute "two dogs are similar kinds of animal" without losing the sense of the statement. — Janus
I see. I must have misunderstood when you said: — Luke
I didn't mean that there is never any agreement, in an absolute sense, only that in those instances there is no agreement. — Metaphysician Undercover
Bongo had said that we strive for agreement, — Metaphysician Undercover
I think our poor little three year old has suffocated under her blanket. It seems that no one has been paying attention to her. — Fooloso4
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
She is doing what we all have to do all the time, to a greater or lesser extent. Play the game of pointing the words (or pictures or sunsets) at what they (already, or are destined eventually to) point at. About which there obviously can be (as famously noted) "no fact of the matter". But about which we are nonetheless happy to strive to agree. — bongo fury
Fair, if snooty, point. — bongo fury
If my last post above is in any way to blame for your sense — bongo fury
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