'Physicality' (of chairs etc) is merely one possible aspect of that interaction. 'Things' such as 'love', 'understanding', 'God', etc...may lack such an aspect, but may still have consistent social usage. — fresco
Is God not an actual thing? Must God be physical to fit into Frege's terminological system?The Reference is the actual thing which the Designation(word) refers to — marcolobo8
The designation "God" refers to the referent God, and the senses are numerous: e.g. the almighty creator of the universe, an omniscient being, etc.How do i apply Freges model on the word “God”?
It is my understanding that Wittgenstein's 'meaning is use' was a later rejection of Frege's support for 'a picture theory of language'.
From developments in phenomenology, the idea of 'an actual thing' is countered by the views that 'things are thinged by thingers'..i.e. 'things' are those social acquired words we (humans) give to repetitive interaction events of observers and focal aspects of 'our world'. 'Physicality' (of chairs etc) is merely one possible aspect of that interaction. 'Things' such as 'love', 'understanding', 'God', etc...may lack such an aspect, but may still have consistent social usage. — fresco
Seems to me that recycling is an act, or a cause, in the world that leads to a change in the world. I don't see any reason to throw around terms like "materiality", "physicality" "reification", etc. as it complicates things for no good reason. Talking in terms of causality, or the processing of information - from input to output - cause and effect - is more applicable to how language is used and why it is useful in the first place.No. IMO, definitions merely suggest potential usage contexts, and 'materiality' tends to imply 'of focal concern', not an allusion to 'physicality' as such (although 'to be of concern' is not without its biological connotations which are also 'physical events') As suggested on another thread, what 'matters' in social agreement is 'what happens hext', not some abstract state we call 'agreed meaning'. Reification, is the process of reinforcing the functional social value for a concept which lacks immediate 'physicality' by associating it with a physical 'object'. Thus, for example, 'recycling' is reified by designated disposal bins, or 'nationhood' is reified by a flag.
Now we could perhaps stretch the reification argument to a claim that the physicality of 'words' is itself responsible for reification of any concept, but that could be a step too far. — fresco
If so, is it as an object or a concept? — marcolobo8
Frege has this model of Designation/Sense/Reference.
The designation is the word itself, i.e “chair”.
The Reference is the actual thing which the Designation(word) refers to, i.e an actual chair.
The sense is the Way in which the Reference is presented to us/given to us, i.e we Think of a chair as something to sit on.
This model is pretty straight forward regarding actual physical objects... but what about “concept words”? — marcolobo8
Im particular interested in the word “God” since im writing a text about it.
How do i apply Freges model on the word “God”? Is there even a definite reference to the word “God”? If so, is it as an object or a concept? — marcolobo8
I thought about it before I typed it. That's why I typed it. Cause and effect. The words on the screen refer to the idea in my head that wasn't the words typed on the screen, but were visual and auditory images of humans using words to refer to things in the world. Humans are not made of words. They are made of flesh and mouths and make noises with their mouths and point with their hands. The words on the screen are black scribbles that are about those images that I thought about, so I don't know what you mean by "vacuous".I suggest you think about your somewhat vacuous phrase 'naming things for the purpose of communicating the named things'. Compare it with ''things are merely repetitive observation events' (Rovelli) and ' all observation involves verbalization' (Maturana). — fresco
If you and those that you've quoted have made true statements about the nature of reality, then it seems that it is you and they, who are the naive realists. How can you make any truth statement about the nature of reality, implying that is how it is for everyone, and not be a naive realist? How is it that you know the nature of reality to say that ''things are merely repetitive observation events"? How do you know this if not by observing reality?Whether or not you understand these points, they certainly indicate attempts to transcend your 'naive realism' by emphasizing the inextricability of 'observer' and 'observed'. — fresco
Most other people understand what I'm talking about when I said that. If meaning is use, then I used words and they have meaning. Saying that you don't understand what I mean is inconsistent with the idea that meaning is simply use. If someone uses words, everyone should understand the meaning, right? How can someone not understand what someone else means if meaning is simply use and use entails drawing scribbles and making sounds with your mouth? There must be something more to "use" if others can't understand what it meant by word use.Sorry, but I have no idea what you mean by the phrase 'true nature of reality' ! — fresco
Does every statement you scribbled here refer to some real state-of-affairs which is the case for everyone regardless whether they believe it or not? If not, then how would it be useful to anyone else and why did you type it in the first place? Why are you communicating with me if it's not to transmit your ideas to me as if your ideas would be useful to me and others? And is it your word-use that is useful, or what your words mean that is useful?From developments in phenomenology, the idea of 'an actual thing' is countered by the views that 'things are thinged by thingers'..i.e. 'things' are those social acquired words we (humans) give to repetitive interaction events of observers and focal aspects of 'our world'. 'Physicality' (of chairs etc) is merely one possible aspect of that interaction. 'Things' such as 'love', 'understanding', 'God', etc...may lack such an aspect, but may still have consistent social usage. — fresco
How can you explain anything without having what the explanation is about prior to the explanation? Aboutness is another term for causation. Effects are about their causes. Effects carry information about their causes. Information/meaning is the relationship between causes and their effects.IMO, all we can attempt to explain is what 'communication' is functionally about. Maturana for example might describe it as ' structural coupling between biological,systems directed at a mutual goal'. And, If you think 'cause and effect' are essential aspects of the term 'explanation' we are not on the same wavelength. — fresco
According to Maturana, the cognizing organism is informationally closed. Given that it can, nevertheless, produce descriptions; i.e., concepts, conceptual structures, theories, and eventually a picture of its world, it is clear that it can do this only by using building blocks which it has gleaned through some process of abstraction from the domain of its own experience. This insight, which Maturana expresses by saying that all cognitive domains arise exclusively as the result of operations of distinction which are made by the organism itself, was one of the points that attracted me to his work the very first time I came across it. — Ernst von Glasersfeld
It means that 'information theory' as per attempted computer modelling of 'cognition' is not applicable. The organism structurally adapts to perturbations in its environment. It makes no 'choice' in the information theoretic sense of 'deciding between alternatives'
Indeed the failure of such models has led to the rise of alternative models such as 'emboded cognition' in which 'languaging' is merely a complex behaviour which requires no concept of 'a world independent of the organic system/s which defines it.' 'Closure' implies 'a world limited by the organism'.
These developments follow the evolution of ideas from Kant, via phenomenology, to linguistic nonrepresentationalism in which there are no independent 'things-in-themselves'.
Socialization implies that individuals 'structurally couple' to form a more complex system which defines its 'joint world'.
'Predation' in which 'a predator' is separate from 'its prey' is seen by Maturana as an anthropomorphism. Predation is merely an automatic structural coupling involving a a temporary 'joint system'. — fresco
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