I don't think he actually says this, and this is the conclusion to his logic only if you assume that to misuse a word is to fail to satisfy an essential definition. It seems to me rather that to misuse a word is to use it in some way unconventionally. If you want to apply Wittgenstein in the "chair" case then this could mean something like: not used according to the family resemblances that we can see in the word's conventional uses. — jamalrob
Not really. It can be recognisable yet undefinable. That is to say: I know a chair when I see one; so if you show me an elephant and tell me it's a chair, I can call that a misuse of the term and still not be able to define a chair perfectly — Olivier5
You are living proof of such clumsiness (laziness?). Now you're conflating "degree of accuracy needed" with "wrongness".
Different applications of any tool will have different tolerances. To quote Adam Savage, "every tool's a hammer."
If one is describing shapes they "see" in cloud formations, the margin for error is enormous. If one is drawing up blueprints to produce precision parts for scientific instruments, the tolerance is very small. It all comes back to purpose. Different applications require different levels of precision.
I will reiterate that nowhere in any of this is there a need for this notion of absolute meaning ("essence") you want words to have. They just don't, and beyond that, they shouldn't. — Pro Hominem
He talks about this at around 20:20. Did you notice? His response is to ask how you know that "chair" is being misused. If you can say all that you know, you ought be able to say when you know the word has been misused. But to know when it has been misused is just to know it's definition. — Banno
You know that I've noticed. I flat out refused.
What do you make of that refusal and the reasons I've given for it? — Srap Tasmaner
:grin:Yes, to know a word is being misused is to know it's definition. However, it isn't necessary for us to know the correct definition of, say, the word "chair" to realize that words are being misused. Imagine an array of clocks before you, all showing different times. What conclusion can you draw? You don't need to know the correct time to realize that some or all of the clocks are showing the wrong time. Right? — TheMadFool
Yes, to know a word is being misused is to know it's definition. — TheMadFool
Wittgenstein's idea of language games depends on minor misuse of words being considered proper usage and since we've demonstrated that that leads to, as per the sorites/heap paradox, a situation where all words will have the exact same extension viz. the entire universe itself, something unacceptable, it follows that minor misuse can't be considered proper usage and ergo, Wittgenstein's language game concept has no leg to stand on, is not true. — TheMadFool
The only thing that all chairs have in common is that we call them all "chairs". — creativesoul
Wittgenstein was dull. His ideas are always half-cooked. — Olivier5
That’s how I can recognise a chair when I see one: i can understand the fence of the concept, its limits. What is much harder if not impossible, is to define positively the essence of a chair. — Olivier5
his language game concept doesn't hold water because it depends on every use of a word being correct. — TheMadFool
Why do you think this? — Banno
"There is no essence in morality, to seek to understand it is folly for there's nothing to understand" is something I expected Wittgenstein to say — TheMadFool
Well, that's... incredible. — Banno
more and more objects will fall into the domain of every single world until there's nothing left and every word would mean every other word. — TheMadFool
Yes, to know a word is being misused is to know it's definition. However, it isn't necessary for us to know the correct definition of, say, the word "chair" to realize that words are being misused. — TheMadFool
Imagine an array of clocks before you, all showing different times. What conclusion can you draw? You don't need to know the correct time to realize that some or all of the clocks are showing the wrong time. Right? — TheMadFool
What if the clocks are all labeled "Here"?
What if they're labeled as you say but their times are only a few minutes apart?
What if speaking a natural language isn't like looking at a shelf full of clocks? — Srap Tasmaner
I was just trying to milk it for the obvious truth. — Pro Hominem
My kids have seen me play chess, and when little would sometimes want to "play chess like dad" by moving pieces around on the board. They're playing something, but it's not chess. They don't know how to play chess. Even when I played this game with them, my ability to play chess didn't turn what I was doing into playing chess. We were still only playing whatever that game was. — Srap Tasmaner
to learn how to play tic-tac-toe, do you have to know that you don't know how to play tic-tac-toe? — Srap Tasmaner
Here's a hard question: to learn how to play tic-tac-toe, do you have to know that you don't know how to play tic-tac-toe? — Srap Tasmaner
Good! I hadn't even been thinking about incentive.
Any other thoughts? — Srap Tasmaner
if you already know that 2+2=4, it’s impossible for you to learn it again, unless you forgot it — Olivier5
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.