 jacksonsprat22
jacksonsprat22         
         And? Science was a form of natural philosophy. Newton called himself a philosopher, so did Galileo. Words are arbitrary descriptions. — h060tu
 h060tu
h060tu         
         No. Words don't become what you want them to. That is solipsism. — jacksonsprat22
 h060tu
h060tu         
         We are using English. You did not invent that language. — jacksonsprat22
 h060tu
h060tu         
          jacksonsprat22
jacksonsprat22         
         he irony of you using language games to argue philosophical points in a discussion about Wittgenstein is apparently totally lost on you. — h060tu
 h060tu
h060tu         
         Wittgenstein never said language use was arbitrary. Words have meaning withing any 'game.' — jacksonsprat22
 jacksonsprat22
jacksonsprat22         
         That's basically the same thing as being arbitrary. — h060tu
 h060tu
h060tu         
         Absolutely not. Chess is a game. You cannot move the king like a queen. Not arbitrary. — jacksonsprat22
 jacksonsprat22
jacksonsprat22         
         Within the logic of that game, you cannot. But you can change the game's logic. The game's logic is arbitrary. There's no law of nature that says chess needs to be played in a specific way. It's arbitrary. — h060tu
 h060tu
h060tu         
         No, chess is universal and has the same rules. You can play fantasy chess but both players have to agree on the rules. — jacksonsprat22
 jacksonsprat22
jacksonsprat22         
         You can play a hack of Pokemon, or use cheat codes, play online, glitch it to hell and back. Arbitrary. — h060tu
 jacksonsprat22
jacksonsprat22         
         Chess is universal? lol Ok dude. Good luck convincing aliens that chess is universal. — h060tu
 h060tu
h060tu         
         What aliens? — jacksonsprat22
 h060tu
h060tu         
         Never heard about any aliens. — jacksonsprat22
 jacksonsprat22
jacksonsprat22         
         You're totally missing the point. You made a statement about chess' "universality" which is a metaphysical statement about how chess always is and always will be. I'm saying that you're really confusing or not understanding, what you're saying. Chess isn't "universally" played anyway. It's played in this way at the current time, as far as we know. It's not universal. And that makes it arbitrary, by definition. I don't understand how this is so hard to understand. But so far every point I've made goes over people's heads, so maybe it's my fault for wasting my time. — h060tu
 jacksonsprat22
jacksonsprat22         
          h060tu
h060tu         
         I do not think you understand what Wittgenstein meant by language game. If you think he meant they are arbitrary then you know nothing about Wittgenstein. I tried to be nice, but clearly you are ignorant. — jacksonsprat22
 h060tu
h060tu         
         Chess has rules. If you do not play by the rules it is not chess. Why is this hard to comprehend? — jacksonsprat22
 jacksonsprat22
jacksonsprat22         
         But I'm saying those rules are total nonsense. — h060tu
 h060tu
h060tu         
         Chess is not utter nonsense. I think you really don't know shit about Wittgenstein. — jacksonsprat22
 jacksonsprat22
jacksonsprat22         
         Okay? So if you're missing a King piece and you decide to use a pawn instead, it's not chess anymore? — h060tu
 jacksonsprat22
jacksonsprat22         
         And I've made it pretty clear I don't agree with Wittgenstein. — h060tu
 h060tu
h060tu         
         Players agree on what the piece is--but only in friendly games. i don't believe you could do that in a tournament. — jacksonsprat22
 h060tu
h060tu         
         Don't agree with him on what? He never claimed a language game is arbitray. — jacksonsprat22
 jacksonsprat22
jacksonsprat22         
         You're right. I DID. I keep saying that. Jacques Derrida makes the argument that all language is arbitrary. There are no words that self-define themselves. All words are defined by other words, defined by other words, defined by other words, defined by other words ad infinitum. Ergo, all words are arbitrary. There are no words that are self-defined. There is no outside text. — h060tu
 h060tu
h060tu         
         I do not think Derrida argued that language is arbitrary. — jacksonsprat22
 Streetlight
Streetlight         
          Banno
Banno         
         That's a bit to quick. He did think that there was not much of import that could be said about metaphysics, but he did think it of the utmost import. Hence, what could not be said must be show.I think he believed metaphysics was incoherent. — jacksonsprat22
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