Do you understand what an essential feature is? You made a big fuss about sufficient and necessary features in the OP. — Luke
Banno
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
Luke
Streetlight
Wittgenstein's core assumption - that all uses of a word are correct - is false. — TheMadFool
neonspectraltoast
neonspectraltoast
jacksonsprat22
Catching the ball means winning the game? — Luke
Luke
jacksonsprat22
Nevertheless, what about a game such as truth or dare. Is that a game? If so, what counts as successful and unsuccessful performance? — Luke
Luke
jacksonsprat22
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
neonspectraltoast
Streetlight
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
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
Streetlight
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
Streetlight
Banno
Questionable if that's really a game. — neonspectraltoast
Banno
...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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