You can teach something to a kid, a dog or anyone else without being explicit about it. But you can’t do that with tic tac toe. Too complex. — Olivier5
One must take care here, not to think both of concepts as giving the meaning of a word, and of concepts as some sort of mental furniture - items inside minds. For I can not see the mental furniture inside your mind, nor you the mental furniture inside my mind; and hence, there could be no question of our agreeing as to the meaning of a word. What we do have is the public record of what has been said and done with words, so if we are to reach agreement as to the meaning of a word, we must find it there.A good definition is always a good approximation of some unsayable, ineffable ghost of an idea that we call a concept. — Olivier5
For me to go through this rather tedious charade, i would first need to figure out that you are trying to teach me some new game, but are unwilling or unable to teach me the rules in plain English so you’re just showing to me how it’s played. — Olivier5
What we do have is the public record of what has been said and done with words, so if we are to reach agreement as to the meaning of a word, we must find it there. — Banno
I love dictionaries, and I like to compare different definitions from different dictionaries. No need to reinvent the wheel, it’s already been written up. Modern languages are well codified, by and large. — Olivier5
Kids play games that only kinda have rules, rules that can change all the time, — Srap Tasmaner
For me to go through this rather tedious charade, i would first need to figure out that you are trying to teach me some new game, which I don’t know how to play yet. — Olivier5
When it's your turn, you ask me where you're supposed to put your "X" or your "O", whichever you're playing. — Srap Tasmaner
How do you check that someone knows how to play?
Do you have them explicitly list the rules?
Or do you watch them play? — Banno
Try it for yourself. — Banno
We often do stuff without explicitly following rules. — Banno
Yeah I've done that one. — Srap Tasmaner
You're always slipping in "explicitly" and "explicit". Are you arguing that we do stuff implicitly following rules, or just priming the intuition pump? — Srap Tasmaner
But doesn't that sentence cry out for "if you want to play the game right"? — Srap Tasmaner
There is an essence, but it cannot be presented, examined, discussed. If that is so, what use is it? Why bother?I still think there is such a thing as the essence of a concept, in our mind, but these essences remain forever elusive, intuitive, almost impossible to express precisely. There are literally beyond words, because (IMO) they are the basis for words. — Olivier5
Popper’s approach, spelled out in the preface to the Open Society, is: Just try and get to the level of precision in language that you need in order to solve or at least describe the problem you are talking about. It’s all a matter of what works, of what’s good enough. Because your definitions are never going to be perfect. — Olivier5
Popper’s approach, spelled out in the preface to the Open Society, is: Just try and get to the level of precision in language that you need in order to solve or at least describe the problem you are talking about. It’s all a matter of what works, of what’s good enough. Because your definitions are never going to be perfect. — Olivier5
There is no teaching tic-tac-toe without rules; — Srap Tasmaner
There is an essence, but it cannot be presented, examined, discussed. If that is so, what use is it? Why bother? — Banno
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.