Do you understand what an essential feature is? You made a big fuss about sufficient and necessary features in the OP. — Luke
But games do have essential, defining, features; — TheMadFool
You are assuming this. It just need not be so. — Banno
The point is that an anchor is not needed. — Banno
Nuh. Re-think it. — Banno
Wittgenstein's core assumption - that all uses of a word are correct - is false. — TheMadFool
Catching the ball means winning the game? — Luke
Nevertheless, what about a game such as truth or dare. Is that a game? If so, what counts as successful and unsuccessful performance? — Luke
We weren't talking about language games, but games in general, and whether all games must contain some common essential feature. Wittgenstein rejects this idea, claiming that games share in a family of similar features, but without there being one essential feature that every game must contain. — Luke
It's still a matter of feeling like a success or failure. I suppose completely embarrassing yourself would be a failure, as opposed to successfully surviving the truth or dare. — neonspectraltoast
This is not a 'core assumption of Wittgenstein', which you would know if you actually had even a passing familiarity of the view you are trying to 'critique'.
It's one of the reasons Witty qualifies use as use in a language game, and not just use as such - one of the unfortunate elements which is lost when people shorten the quote to "meaning is use", which in turn leads to completely nonsense threads like the OP. — StreetlightX
they're both true in the particular language game they're a part of. — TheMadFool
No, this has nothing to do with truth.
Forget 'correct' meaning. There is meaning, or there isn't meaning (something is meaningful, or meaningless), that's it. — StreetlightX
Yes, and? What does that have to do with Wittgenstein? — StreetlightX
Questionable if that's really a game. — neonspectraltoast
...Wittgenstein's core assumption - that all uses of a word are correct... — TheMadFool
But one can be mistaken about the meaning of a word: this speaks to someone's lack of knowledge - it is a comment on the person using the word, not the institution of meaning. — StreetlightX
Moreover, nothing is stopping you from employing 'dog' to mean 'block of ice with a straw': but you'd better be consistent about it, and you'd better be clear that this use has nothing to do with what anyone else refers to as 'dog'. — StreetlightX
"Correct" and "incorrect" are "language-game relative": 'inside' a language-game, one can use or not use a word correctly: but those terms lose applicability once you start comparing across different language-games. — StreetlightX
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