the assertion's truth maker is something else. — Michael
As in, the whole process of definition relies on truth, so trying to define truth will necessarily result in circularity? Or just a general skepticism, given the results so far? — Moliere
Sorry Mongrel for the divergence. If you think it's not quite applicable, we could move this to another thread. My thought was that "meanings" could actually serve as one half to the correspondence theory -- meanings could correspond to facts, whether those facts be about English or otherwise. — Moliere
Obviously the hypothetical person is stipulating another definition. But not many people are using said definition, no? — Moliere
Now, if everyone began to use "tomato" as "used for emphasis", then the meaning of the word has changed. — Moliere
How would you deal with, say, the existence of an English class? What is it they are learning? The mathematical average of the contents of a culture's mind? — Moliere
what would you say we learn when we learn the meanings to English words, given that meanings are mental/private/subjective? — Moliere
But there is a difference between saying that we can tell what "tomato" means by what everyone uses "tomato" as, and that a descriptive definition refers to consensus usage. A descriptive definition describes the meaning of a term. We can tell what the meaning of that term is by the extension of usage of said term. There's not exactly a Committee for Consensus on the Sign which holds conventions to ensure consensus is reached, at least with most natural languages. — Moliere
A stipulative definition is understood because I know what "to stipulate" means. — Moliere
"Tomato" has meaning regardless of what a person might stipulate it as because "stipulate" means. — Moliere
So, no, just because someone can use a sign idiosyncratically that doesn't sink the notion that "tomato" means something regardless of said stipulation. — Moliere
How would you deal with, say, the existence of an English class? What is it they are learning? — Moliere
that what you learn in English class, when you learn word meaning, — Moliere
Well, I don't want to boil semantics down to pragmatics, more than anything. So "attached" just means it's not merely the usage of an utterance which is the meaning, but that the meaning of some utterance can be determined by the extension of usage. — Moliere
I'll get to the other stuff, but I want to just sort this one little thing out first. If "definition" on your account refers to some consensus usage, then one can't stipulate a definition that only one is using. — Terrapin Station
So, the fact that arbitrary meanings can be stipulated of words and phrases really shows nothing of any significance about meaning or definition. — John
This paragraph isn't at all clear to me, unless for some reason--though Lord knows what reason--you'd be reading "consensus" as necessarily referring to some sort of formal agreement a la your comment about a committee. — Terrapin Station
That sentence doesn't make sense to me, either (including grammatically). — Terrapin Station
Other than that, definitions only obtain via stipulation (per usage at least). — Terrapin Station
But then it's just a matter of whether other people will agree with that stipulation or not. If lots of folks agree and follow suit, then it becomes a conventional usage, and dictionary authors note it when they're doing their work. — Terrapin Station
(c) Definitions are stipulations, not truth claims — Terrapin Station
Anyway, so you mostly learn the conventions of the language in English class. You could separate prescriptions from that, but really, prescriptions are the conventions of a particular population (such as English professors and other people considered language experts)
On my view, one can not learn, or share, etc., meaning. Meanings are mental-only, and can't be made non-mental. You learn definitions and observe (behavioral) usage. Meanings are something that happen inside an individual's head, from a first-person perspective. (This is a response to your final question as well.) — Terrapin Station
I'm having trouble following this... sorry. — Mongrel
Consider agreement. Two people are willing to assert the same truth-bearer. It can't be that they're willing to make the same utterance. I can't make your utterance and vice versa.
If I know that "tomato" means a round, soft, red fruit that is eaten raw or cooked and that is often used in salads, sandwiches, sauces, etc., then it is true that "tomato" means a round, soft, red fruit that is eaten raw or cooked and that is often used in salads, sandwiches, sauces, etc. — Moliere
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