how you correlate reasoning to grammar....
— Mww
....briefly (...), the OLP....idea of grammar is that each concept, say, knowing, or, an apology, has its own (or multiple)....ways it can make sense, how it works (or fails): e.g., understanding--when can you say someone else understands something? how do you explain it? what is proof for understanding, say, math, a poem, a person? etc., each concept having its own (subject to change and adaptation as we change our judgments, standards, lives, etc: what is justice, these days?). — Antony Nickles
how you correlate reasoning to grammar....
— Mww
....briefly (...), the OLP....idea of grammar is that each concept, say, knowing, or, an apology, has its own (or multiple)....ways it can make sense, how it works (or fails): e.g., understanding--when can you say someone else understands something? how do you explain it? what is proof for understanding, say, math, a poem, a person? etc., each concept having its own (subject to change and adaptation as we change our judgments, standards, lives, etc: what is justice, these days?).
— Antony Nickles
So grammar is the science of application of concepts? Can we say that? If concepts have a plurality of meanings, grammar is the method for picking the better of them? Ok....to what end?
When I pick use a word representing a concept, and indicate some meaning by it, is that word intended to demonstrate my reasoning, or is it chosen to align with your understanding of my reasoning? — Mww
“...To say "He alone can know what he intends" is nonsense: to say "He alone can know what he will do", wrong....”
(From your Witt, P.I., p. 223)
Am I suppose to gather from all that, that I can know what he intends, if only I choose the right word for the concepts? So I say...did you intend ____?; he says, nope, not that. So I say, well, did you mean ____?; nope, not that either. I see a serious problem here, don’t you?
On the other hand, I say, did you mean ____, and he says, no, I meant _____, to which I say, oh, cool, I get it now, or I could just as well say, ohfercrissakes, that just doesn’t make any sense at all. — Mww
[H]ere’s the kicker. All I wrote just now? All I’ve ever written, actually? I submit, My Good Sir, that it is impossible for you to tell, if I got it right, whether I used my grammar (reasoning) correctly with respect to your understanding, or merely from my own, and they happen to coincide from sheer accident. And, if I got it wrong, it is impossible for you to tell whether I chose my meanings with the intent to make you think I got it wrong, when I understood you perfectly from the get-go. Both of which catastrophically falsify Witt’s prophecy given above. — Mww
I am having a hard time figuring out if the OP does deal with the issue your cartoon humorously took up. But since the cartoon does — Coben
I think Wittgenstein was making a joke. Either that, or he was wrong. — Banno
Troll much? — Antony Nickles
StreetlightX made a thread on this topic a few years back.
Lions and Grammar — Banno
Sure, the context is important. If that is the whole of your thesis, then we have no disagreement. — Banno
Have a look at the sections around about ∮500. — Banno
The context is guessing thoughts, and the talk of pictures relating this to his picture theory of meaning; it's the whole picture that we do not understand, as opposed to when some specific utterances are seen as lacking sense (this is dealt with around ∮500). "If a lion could speak we could no understand him" is the expression of a conviction, not a piece of reasoning. — Banno
The move to thought, and thereafter to language, is perpetrated with the use of Wittgenstein’s famous idea that thoughts, and propositions, are pictures—“the picture is a model of reality” (TLP 2.12). Pictures are made up of elements that together constitute the picture. Each element represents an object, and the combination of elements in the picture represents the combination of objects in a state of affairs. The logical structure of the picture, whether in thought or in language, is isomorphic with the logical structure of the state of affairs which it pictures. More subtle is Wittgenstein’s insight that the possibility of this structure being shared by the picture (the thought, the proposition) and the state of affairs is the pictorial form. “That is how a picture is attached to reality; it reaches right out to it” (TLP 2.1511). This leads to an understanding of what the picture can picture; but also what it cannot—its own pictorial form. — SEP Wittgenstein article
“the picture is a model of reality” (TLP 2.12)
I think the picture theory ran deep enough to carry well into PI... — Banno
I think the picture theory... this is what he has in mind when he talks about the lion; we have no picture of what would be going on.
And I think that we do have at least something of a picture of what is going on. — Banno
That first paragraph is quite beyond my keen. — Banno
Wittgenstein was never a positivist. — Banno
So, are we going somewhere here? — Banno
If I see someone writhing in pain with evident cause I do not think: all the same, his feelings are hidden from me. — Antony Nickles
[Witt] [r]einforcing that non-humanness of animals and the non-animalness of humans actually, in the long run, I think does damage to the very goals you are attributing LW with. We've had a long hallucination that we are radically different from animals (and then also even other races of humans) — Antony Nickles
This has two things going on. Acting and intending, and the knowledge of those. To intend (to do) something, and, to mean (something) have two different ways they work (or don't)--different grammars. — Antony Nickles
Yes, I can know what you are going to do; "look he is going to ask her out!" — Antony Nickles
Something unexpected happened or outside the grammar of our expectations. — Antony Nickles
Meaning' is like the imagined 'hidden' inner process. A concept's grammar is its possibilities of sense--not a fixed 'meaning' like a definition either. "It's a blue day." — Antony Nickles
But trust me I can tell when you've reasoning is wrong. — Antony Nickles
But if we understood each other by coincidence or accident, would it matter? — Antony Nickles
trickery, pretending, lying, charade, etc. look exactly like the real thing (maybe), so: how do we KNOW! — Antony Nickles
Witt does say its amazing that we can communicate at all. — Antony Nickles
"If a lion could talk, we could not understand him."
I will argue that it is essential to put the above sentence in the textual context in which it was written to see its USE here by Witt--(...) that it is used in its sense as an uncontested FACT (not to be refuted or interpreted, nor an open question, nor a thesis, etc.) — Antony Nickles
"I cannot know what is going on in him" is above all a picture. — Antony Nickles
After Davidson, if we are able to recognise that the lion is indeed speaking, then by that very fact we must be able to recognise some of what it is saying. Otherwise we would have no reason to think it was not humming to itself, or the equivalent. — Banno
We do have this problem with dolphins. They are clearly communicating, but are they using language? Might we figure it out and be able to say something to them? — Marchesk
[Your admitted paraphrase (of me):] with a human in pain we have to add more assumptions to avoid feeling empathy. * * * I think it is problematic to not realize that the animal us is what is being denied when we assume our way away from empathy with other humans and animals. — Coben
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