So can one really ever “use the right words” to explain or convey an experience/ concept that they hold in their mind That won’t be grossly distorted by the receiving mind? Is language fundamentally flawed in that it’s not highly faithful to “meaning” But only “kind of”.
How can we discuss an issue if we are always talking cross purposes? Or is it the very fact that we talk cross purposes that makes it worthwhile to discuss a topic? — Benj96
How we manufacture the capacity to communicate is through conformity, uniformity, and standardization in education. — Metaphysician Undercover
Truth cannot be grounded in ambiguity, — Metaphysician Undercover
I feel that perhaps understanding a topic Well is analogous to gps triangulation in that different individuals from different backgrounds of experience, meaning and understanding can “bounce” views off others which in turn do the same in order to build a multiplex concept of the location or in this case “definition/knowledge” of the topic centrally addressed.
This is also kind of like the “collective mean” definition that is to say the sum of all interpretations of a concept laid out graphically would look sort of like a wave with the Scientific or dictionary definition Or functional/utilitarian definition close to the Center and more metaphorical or artistically licensed definitions spread out further and further away from the Center. — Benj96
Practical reason (or what Mead calls "value rational") isn't ambiguous. In fact, practical reason is intended to function because it does disambiguate and allow us to be guided by norms and conventions, even when a purely utilitarian calculus might fail. The most important truths on this view are the ones we reach through discursive collaboration. — Pantagruel
Are you sure of this? Is something that changes or has a bivalency/ multiple facets any less true than something that stays singular/ the same/identical or unchanging? — Benj96
Sure for the concretisation of scientific facts and observations, we take truth to be the most objective, consistent, most measurable and repeatable things but the issue is.... one must accept that personal views, emotions and feelings are true to the person who has them. Even demonstrable. That is to say they exist and are true relative to certain beings/ things/ locations in space or perspectives and cannot be proven repeatably by the convention of science. — Benj96
It seems to me like there is ambiguity within norms and conventions, by the very nature of what these things are. For example, the variety of answers Plato got when asking in The Republic, what is "just". — Metaphysician Undercover
Then you are defining "true" in relation to honesty. Many people are not honest about their emotions and feelings. — Metaphysician Undercover
The original point I was making is that many human emotions and sensations can be ambiguous (For example “bittersweet”) but the measure of truth value of these things is not dependent on them being unambiguous such as in scientific method where ambiguity must be removed and concepts objectified and measured. Science only goes so far in measuring truth value/ the trueness of things whilst other forms of human discipline are necessary to comprehend or measure other forms of truth. Mostly being relative. — Benj96
Your depth of understanding of my statement “emotions and feelings are true to the person who has them” is rather hollow. — Benj96
But, in general, norms in Habermas' discourse theory function as heuristics to reduce cognitive load — Pantagruel
"Heuristics to reduce cognitive load"? This appears as self-contradictory. Heuristics, by their nature, seem to be a cognitive load. Are you saying, that norms are habits, so that we do certain things without having to think consciously about these things, thereby reducing the cognitive load? — Metaphysician Undercover
Keep in mind, Habermas' position is that the we are primarily intersubjective or social beings, so he doesn't need to explain that, it is fundamental to our makeup. This is a common sociological stance. So when he says we have a "massively shared" lifeworld. He takes for granted these heuristics, which, by their nature hide "underneath" cognition. He also mentions that "reason" is called into play precisely where these heuristics break down. — Pantagruel
The facts of evolution and civilization seem to support the position that we are social animals. The very idea of an individual entity abstracted from its species and social context is meaningless. Language is entirely a social construct. — Pantagruel
Clearly, what is the case is that the "species" is an abstraction, nd individual beings are the true existent things. — Metaphysician Undercover
The species includes the individual, the individual represents the species. — Pantagruel
Clearly, the species is an abstraction. — Metaphysician Undercover
It may indeed be a scientific term, nevertheless, the species is also the sum total of its organic constituent entities on the planet. And we are not in a science class, nor are we using the term for classificatory purposes. — Pantagruel
If you really think that the term "species" has no organic extension then that would be an end of fruitful discussion I fear. — Pantagruel
Connotation and Denotation are two principal methods of describing the meanings of. words. Connotation refers to the wide array of positive and negative associations that most words naturally carry with them, whereas denotation is the precise, literal definition of a word that might be found in a dictionary. — WWW
I've spent the last six months reading material which entirely contradicts your position. Mead, Parsons, Habermas. Of course, you are entitled to your opinion. Just be aware, there is an opposing viewpoint, and it is cogent and coherent. Viewing collectives of biological entities as complex systems in their own right perhaps is just too "modern" a perspective for you. — Pantagruel
Systems theoretic analysis has a proven track record across a broad range of empirical fields, including sociological ones. — Pantagruel
This is the folly of scientism, the belief that the capacity to predict implies a true understanding of the phenomenon. Pragmaticism provides us with no guidance toward ontological truth. — Metaphysician Undercover
Are you implying that science is the same thing as scientism? If so, you are operating under a massive misconception and a prejudice. — Pantagruel
No, obviously I didn't say that science is the same thing as scientism. But assuming that a scientific theory provides us with a true understanding of the events which it predicts, because it has a proven track record in its predictions, is a mistake of scientism. — Metaphysician Undercover
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