More just that language isn't something which is institutional, — Moliere
Agreement is a kind of institutional action . . . There is a certain history to words which agreement is unable to overcome. People don't follow suit and decide to create language. Rather, we are born into a world with language, and it already means something, regardless of my intent. — Moliere
I'd say that this is what your theory is unable to explain -- it explains how it is we can take a sign to mean something, but it doesn't explain the factual side of language. — Moliere
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
How about both? I'd call the former a descriptive definition, and the latter an ostensive definition. So they are two different definitions of the meaning, but we can both fairly say we know the meaning of the word, I think. — Moliere
But then suppose while I was in California I were to say, "It is 5:00 PM". And my cousin, who lives on the East coast, were to also say "It is 5:00 PM" at the same time in a telephone conversation. Only one of these utterances is true, — Moliere
One of the reasons I like the focus on utterances is that it seems, at least, to be a nice and neat way to accept all the messiness of context without getting lost in the mud of possible contexts — Moliere
I couldn't disagree with these two paragraphs more strongly than I do. In my opinion, it's rather clear that you have this stuff factually wrong. — Terrapin Station
The factual side of language certainly isn't that words have definitions (which you'd call "meanings") that can be different than usage. That goes against the factual evidence. Words are defined however people choose to define them. They can do something highly idiosyncratic there, or they can follow suit with how the vast majority of people are defining the term, or they can do anything in between. None of that is right or wrong, by the way. And typically, those definitions, that usage (of the vast majority that is) shifts over time. — Terrapin Station
Haha--no, that isn't true. It's only true that that's the conventional definition — Terrapin Station
I don't think so. Meaning isn't the same thing as definition, so there's no need to say there are different kinds of meanings just because we define a word in different ways. — Moliere
Two different propositions were expressed. An utterance is sounds or marks, generally... not really a good candidate for truth-bearer. — Mongrel
Propositions don't operate on "possible contexts." A sentence is uttered to express a proposition. Listeners either understand what proposition was expressed or they don't. No malarky about computer generated poetry here. — Mongrel
But these aren't two types of definition, one is a definition, the other a direct relating the word to an object. The latter is knowing what "apple" means by being able to point to an apple, it is not in any way defining "apple". — Metaphysician Undercover
If someone uses the word "apple", then they are not defining it. They are demonstrating competence of the language, but they are putting the language to use. — Moliere
Because I would say that "It is 5:00 PM" is expresses the same proposition regardless of the speaker — Moliere
An understanding of meaning without somehow incorporating context doesn't strike me as terribly helpful because meaning changes so much with context. — Moliere
What's wrong with sounds or marks, vs. propositions? To me it seems that I know the former exist because I see them. But the latter strike me as convenient inventions that don't even account for language meaning, but only the meaning of very particular types of sentences which some philosophers have an interest in. Granted, these are the sorts of sentences we're usually interested in when talking about truth-apt sentences, and therefore truth, but still -- it seems to me that meaning is wider than truth, and truth is just one goal a sentence can accomplish. — Moliere
The relationship between X and what it represents ( an unknown quantity) in algebra is anything but arbitrary. — John
They know what apple means. — Moliere
But X does not represent an unknown quantity, it represents a defined object "Let X = ..." The task of the mathematician is to assign a numerical value to that defined object. The definition of X is completely arbitrary because we can fill the space with whatever random definition which we want to figure the numerical value for. — Metaphysician Undercover
One doesn't even know what proposition is being expressed unless the context of utterance is known.
John said "2 is a prime number."
Bill said, pointing to the number 2 written on the blackboard "That is a prime number."
Different sentences, different utterances, same proposition. — Mongrel
Sounds and marks won't work as primary truth-bearers in spite of their ready visibility. If you and I are in agreement, it's not sounds or marks we're agreeing to. — Mongrel
I get the objection to propositions based on ontological considerations, but as photographer would often say: reality is what we can't do without. Before you ditch propositions, recognize what you're saying you can do without.
As I mentioned, it's communication itself that's undermined by that rejection. — Mongrel
In any case all of this is a red herring for the reason that algebraic definitions are not equivalent to semantic definitions as i already pointed out. — John
Sure, it doesn't matter whether X is the number of times you drove to the store or the number of times you deceived your wife (and the latter may well be incalculable ;) ) but that arbitrariness is a separate (non) issue. — John
My immediate thought is that we could just take meaning for granted. It seems more plausible, to me at least, to believe that our expressions are meaningful rather than to rely upon a belief in propositions to say what it is that makes them meaningful. We don't have to know what it is that makes a sentence meaningful to know that it is meaningful, after all. — Moliere
So do you agree that we need to respect two distinct senses of "meaning"? One is associated with the capacity to relate words to objects, and the other is associated with the capacity to relate words to other words, form a definition. — Metaphysician Undercover
Logic is upfront when we're talking about truth. A truth realist will deny that the mechanics of meaning are ultimately significant with truth because a proposition can be true though it's never been expressed and no one knows it. This must be so. Otherwise there would be no detectives. — Mongrel
Hold on there. A definition is not a meaning. A definition describes the meaning. When someone uses a word, they are not defining it. They're using it. — Moliere
But if we can figure out what words mean by their usage — Moliere
You don't figure out what words mean. You observe usage and assign meaning. — Terrapin Station
Re the reason I'm saying that it's not true or false that tomato is defined as x context-independently, that is outside of how someone(s) happens to be defining/using x, and getting back to the thread topic, is that context-independently, there is no truthmaker for "tomato is defined as x." The reason that I'm not reading "defined as" as necessarily referring to the context of consensus or conventional usage I've already explained in detail, and you've already agreed with this; you've already agreed that "defined as" needs to be contextually qualified, that it can't necessarily be read as implying (non-institutional) consensus or conventional usage.
You're not forgetting that I'm talking about a specific context here, right? Namely, how particular persons are defining/using the term(s) in question. I specified this a number of times. — Terrapin Station
And in conjunction with this, you've agreed that "definition," unqualified, does not refer to a non-institutional consensus or conventional usage. — Terrapin Station
No. I figured what you were saying, though, was that because " there is no truthmaker for "tomato is defined as x."" that it follows that meaning is mental/private/subjective. — Moliere
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.