The best I can offer is what all attribution of meaning consists of and/or requires. According to current convention, all theories of meaning presuppose symbolism.
So...
At a bare minimum, all attribution of meaning(all meaning) requires something to become symbol/sign, something to become symbolized/significant and a creature capable of drawing a mental correlation, association, and/or connection between the two. — creativesoul
Math is "meaningless", i.e. devoid of semantics, because it only seeks to deal with syntax, i.e. the bureaucracy of formalisms that govern the abstract, Platonic world of mathematics. — alcontali
NB. All the above will remain 'meaningless' to you unless it triggers 'an intention to act' in you, e.g. to follow up the references. If you stick to the futile quest of 'defining meaning', it means we have mererly engaged in a bit of social dancing which seems to be the principal activity of 'philosophers'. — fresco
A major question considered in mathematical Platonism is: Precisely where and how do the mathematical entities exist, and how do we know about them? Is there a world, completely separate from our physical one, that is occupied by the mathematical entities? How can we gain access to this separate world and discover truths about the entities? One proposed answer is the Ultimate Ensemble, a theory that postulates that all structures that exist mathematically also exist physically in their own universe. — alcontali
I would disagree with the claim that only words have meaning. — creativesoul
A wonderfully tasty ego boost called "personal attack" gets the rhetorical palate juiced up and ready to go. — creativesoul
Other disciplines, unrelated to physics, also successfully use statistics. Hence, physics uses statistics. — alcontali
Would you argue that any form of representation has meaning (including art, photographs, etc.)? — Noah Te Stroete
“Meaning” has different meanings according to different contexts/uses. A lot of differing opinions in this thread, and I suspect that is due to the different contexts/uses. Most if not all of the posts give “true” accounts of meaning (or meaninglessness). We just have to be humble enough to acknowledge that our posts may not exhaust the meaning of “meaning.” — Noah Te Stroete
Yes, that's what I was trying to say, although I was also whining in frustration that poor definition of terms has made this discussion less productive than it could have been. — T Clark
Last week a friend and I visited the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston. We got in an interesting discussion with one of the guides there. I said, although I'm not certain it's true, that paintings and other visual arts don't mean anything because only words have meaning. She and my friend disagreed. — T Clark
So when you say that ‘paintings and visual arts don’t mean anything because only words have meaning’, in my opinion you are trying to contain the meaning of all your experiences to a particular value structure that you believe to be universal (ie. words) - and so anything that cannot be contained within words is declared ‘meaningless’. — Possibility
Yes, that's what I was trying to say, although I was also whining in frustration that poor definition of terms has made this discussion less productive than it could have been.
— T Clark
Agreed. — Noah Te Stroete
A definition of "meaning" is - I suppose - what you're seeking from me. Fair request.
The best I can offer is what all attribution of meaning consists of and/or requires. According to current convention, all theories of meaning presuppose symbolism.
So...
At a bare minimum, all attribution of meaning(all meaning) requires something to become symbol/sign, something to become symbolized/significant and a creature capable of drawing a mental correlation, association, and/or connection between the two.
There are no examples to the contrary. — creativesoul
A wonderfully tasty ego boost called "personal attack" gets the rhetorical palate juiced up and ready to go.
— creativesoul
Delusions of persecution? Sorry, couldn’t resist. — Noah Te Stroete
As I said, statistics is not just an empty structure we fill in, it has it's own meanings. — T Clark
I would disagree with the claim that only words have meaning.
— creativesoul
Would you argue that any form of representation has meaning (including art, photographs, etc.)? What about a door? When I see a door, I know I can potentially open it and walk through it. Does a door have meaning? Or, what about my Grandfather’s burial flag? It might have meaning to me that it doesn’t for others. What about that? — Noah Te Stroete
So when you say that ‘paintings and visual arts don’t mean anything because only words have meaning’, in my opinion you are trying to contain the meaning of all your experiences to a particular value structure that you believe to be universal (ie. words) - and so anything that cannot be contained within words is declared ‘meaningless’. — Possibility
And that's the frustration of not having defined "meaning" back at the beginning. — T Clark
What does Hegal mean when he talks about "desein? — T Clark
It's always struck me that there is only one place for those mathematical entities to exist - the mind of God. A belief in Platonic ideals and a belief in God are equivalent. — T Clark
It's been adequately defined since. Does that not matter here? Does that change not alter the degree of frustration you had prior to it? — creativesoul
Paintings are not insignificant, or unimportant, they just don't mean anything. — T Clark
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