In fact I posit that translation from one language to another cannot be explained other than by reference to the meaning of words that has to be conveyed as faithfully as possible in another language. — Olivier5
I'm not talking of definitions proper, but of something much more basic: the intuitive meaning of the word.
There is a common meaning at the core of "good", which everyone gets intuitively. That's how we usually manage to understand the new usages of a word, by going back to its core meaning and trying to figure the connection with new usage.
The important (and obvious) point to remember is that usage is linked to meaning but is NOT meaning. If words had no meaning, nobody would use them....
Symbolic languages are used to convey information through symbols. If those symbols convey no information, why are you talking? — Olivier5
The gut-feeling you get when someone uses the word "good" - the "intuiton" you speak of - dovetails nicely into OR type definitions. OR type definitions, because of their flexibility, permit intuitive (read lack of rigor) understanding of concepts. — TheMadFool
But this gut-feeling also happens in mathematics. Once a math teacher asked me: ‘Okay so you can derive expression A from expression B and vice versa, mechanically combining the symbols, but do you understand intuitively that they both mean the same thing? — Olivier5
Then what is meaning, and while you're at it, what is speaking? What's the difference between speaking and making noises or drawing scribbles? What if someone says something and then says, "I didn't mean to say that". Which sentence did they mean to say?But meaning is no more than a placeholder here. People mean something when they speak, and what they mean is what is spoken. You've said nothing about what meaning is. Less than helpful. — Banno
The gut-feeling in math is different from the gut-feeling you get when you hear/read the word "good". — TheMadFool
Not really. Mathematics are also a language. The feeling is the same to me — Olivier5
what exactly do you mean by intuition? — TheMadFool
I don't see how it lies outside the language sphere when language use is an instinctive behavior for humans. — Harry Hindu
This is a strange thing to say considering that words are themselves visual and auditory sensations. What does it mean to define sensations with other sensations (scribbles and voices)?And sensations are notoriously hard to define with words. — Olivier5
I mean an idea not yet expressed in words, or to try and be more precise, the germ of an idea in that part of our mental world that lays beyond the language sphere. — Olivier5
Yet as you must be aware, language is a source of confusion like no other, especially when used by people who don't actually think it means anything...How about we work backward with your conception of intuition. It doesn't matter that we, when we intuit something, can't express it in words. What matters is that unless an intuition is expressed in words at some point, invariably later, it can't be distinguished from confusion. The only evidence for an intuition is our ability to find the words to construct a decent proposition from it. — TheMadFool
Yet as you must be aware, language is a source of confusion like no other, especially when used by people who don't actually think it means anything... — 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.