Example: triangle: the space between 3 lines intersecting at 3 points
Space, line, point and triangle are all primal. You can know what all of them are without any sensory evidence (you know them when you're born) — khaled
While there are other words such as "Horse" which you cannot hope to conceptualize before seeing one. — khaled
It got me wondering how we can ever even have well defined concepts in a language when every word is supposedly replaceable by a combination of other words. At what point do we cease defining and start understanding. — khaled
I believe there are certain concepts we're born knowing such as: time, space, shape, etc. Even if you didn't know the word for those you'd understand them. You can usually tell if a word represents one of these "primal concepts" by how hard it is to define. Example: Try to define shape. That's the hardest one I've found so far and I've utterly failed to define shape without just using a synonym. — khaled
Reading much of the newer metaphysics and epistemology posts (especially Bartricks') I find they go around in circles forever. — khaled
Reading much of the newer metaphysics and epistemology posts (especially Bartricks') I find they go around in circles forever.
What is A
A is when you put B and C together
What are B and C
B is a D E and C is a slightly F G
Etc
Seems to be how arguments progress there. It got me wondering how we can ever even have well defined concepts in a language when every word is supposedly replaceable by a combination of other words. At what point do we cease defining and start understanding.
"Philosophy in the flesh" (great book imo) and my recent reading of Eastern philosophy gave me a new perspective which is "chunks of sense". I believe there are certain concepts we're born knowing such as: time, space, shape, etc. Even if you didn't know the word for those you'd understand them. You can usually tell if a word represents one of these "primal concepts" by how hard it is to define. Example: Try to define shape. That's the hardest one I've found so far and I've utterly failed to define shape without just using a synonym. Google defines it as the "outline" of an object but is literally just a synonym
While there are other words such as "Horse" which you cannot hope to conceptualize before seeing one. You aren't born knowing what a horse is and a horse can be defined in other ways such as "The furless four legged animal with hooves that humans usually ride on" (not a perfect definition but one can reach a perfect definition at least). Notice how nothing resembling a synonym of horse appears in the description. Additionally, all the things that do are "non primal words" such as hooves, fur, humans, ride, etc.
I noticed that most of the time "primal" and "non primal" words act as groups (in set theory) where non primal words can only be defined by other non primal words and primal words can only be defined by primal words.
Example: triangle: the space between 3 lines intersecting at 3 points
Space, line, point and triangle are all primal. You can know what all of them are without any sensory evidence (you know them when you're born)
So my hypothesis is: non primal words can only be defined by other non primal words and primal words can only be defined by primal words.
What do you think? — khaled
I believe there are certain concepts we're born knowing such as: time, space, shape, etc — khaled
Reading much of the newer metaphysics and epistemology posts (especially Bartricks') I find they go around in circles forever.
What is A
A is when you put B and C together
What are B and C
B is a D E and C is a slightly F G
Etc — khaled
We cannot ‘conceptualise’ ANYTHING a priori — I like sushi
In any case I must necessarily refer to experience to understand ‘line’ — I like sushi
without sensory input sensibility is mute — I like sushi
So what you're describing as 'primal words' actually goes a lot deeper than simply words. The triangle, which you mention as an example, is a concept — Wayfarer
good luck with finding some foundational collection of 'primal words' in terms of which everything else can be understood. — Wayfarer
These are the first words a baby hears, repeatedly hears, and later understands by way of visual and other sensory verification of the phonymal string's cognitive image — god must be atheist
mentioned above "primal concepts" only involve assigning names to objects. I might have used the word "understand" somewhere above in re "primal words" as if there's a meaning there that needs to be understood but as it turns out "primal words" are meaningless — TheMadFool
. is location in space — christian2017
a line is an infininte of the above (marked as .) that all are in line with two relatively "extreme" points — christian2017
very often have elaborate definitions. — christian2017
I don't see how 'shape' would be 'primal' in your terms — mcdoodle
Personally I'm wary of 'etc'. Just what is included and excluded by an 'etcetera', and how am I to know? — mcdoodle
I just don't like the language used here. By this language a triangle is meaningless amd cannot be understood — khaled
Space, line, point and triangle are all primal. — khaled
You can usually tell if a word represents one of these "primal concepts" by how hard it is to define — khaled
So my hypothesis is: non primal words can only be defined by other non primal words and primal words can only be defined by primal words.
What do you think? — khaled
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