In my opinion, natural predisposition is the reason why the belief in God, as the creator of the real, physical world, is so prevalent. — alcontali
They do mean something, but the ‘something’ isn’t fixed. That something is always going to be different for a different observer, and will also change in relation to the value structure they employ in interacting with the painting. — Possibility
In my opinion, natural predisposition is the reason why the belief in God, as the creator of the real, physical world, is so prevalent. — alcontali
So, it would be in keeping with common usage to say in the latter case that the tablet has meaning, even though it may presently have no determinate meaning for us, because we have not deciphered it. — Janus
We're just back to what does "mean" mean. — T Clark
Meaning is about as complicated as it gets for us, — Possibility
The universe did not exist before we, or someone like us, recognized it. I don't mean that in any kind of mystical or magical way. — T Clark
Well we can obviously address different senses of 'meaning', without having to be concerned over whether we have covered every possible sense of the term. — Janus
Well we can obviously address different senses of 'meaning', without having to be concerned over whether we have covered every possible sense of the term. — Janus
So, it would be in keeping with common usage to say in the latter case that the tablet has meaning, even though it may presently have no determinate meaning for us, because we have not deciphered it. — Janus
And as such, regardless of whether the marks were random or inscribed to convey anything, it is meaningful. — Possibility
The fact is that if there is meaning there then it is, in principle at least, decipherable.Of course it could be deciphered more or less correctly or incorrectly, but that possibility does not exist in the case of the meaningless marks; we would simply be making a mistake if we tried to decipher it. — Janus
We're just back to what does "mean" mean. — T Clark
What sorts of things are meaningful? How do these things become meaningful? To whom are these things meaningful? — creativesoul
I think we all know what it means. ... But describing and defining it in words, with any sort of precision? Not so easy. And yet it remains the case that we all know what "mean" means. You see? — Pattern-chaser
You fail to get my point because you fail to understand that talking about language is in essence an infinite regress equivalent to pulling yourself up by your own bootstraps.
The only 'given' we can start from is that we are clever primates with a complex set of socially acquired behavioral gestures ,we call 'human language' which segments what we call 'the world'. The abstract persistence of 'words' (internalised gestures) act as place markers for focal aspects of that shifting flux we call 'things' allowing us to attempt to predict and control aspects of our world relative to our lifespans and our pattern seeking. Place markers are not 'representational' of 'things in themselves', they are contextual memory aids within potential action plans. — fresco
That is quite an anti-Platonist view. Mathematics deals with counting of not anything in particular. In the abstract, Platonic world of number theory, which is obviously not the real, physical world, there is no need for something to count. Mathematics explores that non-real world. — alcontali
These specific procedures obviously originate from pragmatic interaction with the world. However, the goal of mathematics is to abstract away the real world. Otherwise, without abstracting the real world away, it is not mathematics, but something else — alcontali
A person can think about anything in a meaningful way. And they can also refrain from thinking about anything in a meaningful way. — Terrapin Station
Meaning is something mental that we do. Namely, it's the mental process of associative thinking, of thinking about something so that it implies, refers to, connotes, denotes, suggests or "pushes" or "leans towards", etc. other things. — Terrapin Station
The thing about your perception of ‘deciphering’, though, is that it implies one ‘correct’ meaning, which is unlikely to be the case. — Possibility
In the case of ‘meaningless’ marks, it would indeed be a mistake to assume they correspond to a written language, but I don’t think any marks are meaningless. — Possibility
Having recently joined this forum seeking a more contemporary approach to 'philosophy', I am somewhat disappointed in what I find.
On the specific issue of 'meaning', where, I ask, (following die Kehre ), is the discussion of Wittgenstein's adage 'meaning is use' ? Where I ask is discussion of the major shift to nonrepresentationalism in language ?...or where is Derrida's point that 'meaning' even for the author of text, dynamically shifts ? (merely dismissing that 'Derrida' on this won't do !).
Hence my accusation of 'dancing' (or as Wittgenstein might have called it, Geschwätz) — fresco
Are you a platonist? — Joshs
Are you comfortable with Kant's notion of math as originating from the a priori categorical formal attributes of a transcendental subject? If so, then quantity may seem to you as something we could think apart from meaningful semantic quality, as arising from a different world, that of the a priori purely empty subjective formalism. — Joshs
It is for this reason that each historical innovation in mathematics (Greek geometry, classical logic, analytic geometry and calculus, etc. arise out of the intellectual milieu of their time n the same fashion as does every scientific theory. — Joshs
Formalisms , whether of a mathematical or any other nature, stand for a semantic content. They mean something in order to to do something. — Joshs
We can think color in general abstracted from all other aspects of the world. — Joshs
But the fact that we can separate our formalisms from specific objects that we want to apply them to does not mean that these forms are not in themselves meaningful — Joshs
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