The RHS is not the world. — frank
The sentence on the right is being used, not mentioned. — Banno
Used as in setting out a state of affairs. — Banno
What is on the RHS is a state of affairs — Banno
What's the extension of an apology? — fdrake
While confusion of use and mention is endemic, — bongo fury
any subject of a sentence, anything to which we refer.
— SophistiCat — bongo fury
To be is to be the subject of a predicate.
— Banno — bongo fury
we normally use a sentence to assert something about a (referring) subject.
— Andrew M — bongo fury
Those perceived differences are what our talk is grounded in, i.e., they provide the context for our talk.
— Andrew M
If you'll permit me to be a bit socratic, when you say that they "provide the context for our talk", and that this context "grounds" the use of language, I was wondering if you could comment on:
(1) How speech acts are assigned to contexts; how do you tell which context a speech act is in? — fdrake
(2) Whether the context of a given speech act doesn't just "ground" but also determines some component of its meaning - or in a more pragmatic vocabulary, if the context the speech act arises in influences the norms of use of the speech act? — fdrake
I agree that speech acts both contextualise norms of language use and arise in contexts, what I think this does is stop them from being appealed to as a ground at one moment and as an expression in that ground the next. — fdrake
While confusion of use and mention is endemic, can we please focus on ordinary declarative statements? — bongo fury
I think the extension of a statement is it's truth value. — frank
Fine, add that to the parenthetical varieties of "alleged referent" above. — bongo fury
Now you're doing it. The statement is a disquotation (of its quotation). — bongo fury
...our only point of disagreement is your refusal to acknowledge that events have propositional form; that states of affairs are shaped like propositions. — Banno
...the very equivalence between word and world. — Banno
The above conflates what accounting practices require with what that which is being taken into account requires. Another conflation here is between our accounting practice and that which is being taken into account by virtue of using that practice. These confusions are part and parcel to Banno's approach, for they are built in. There is an utterly inadequate notion of belief at work here as a direct result. — creativesoul
The world can't have the property of being wrong. — frank
When you push on the alleged connection between the statement and its truth condition, we end up with "use", pragmatics, norms being used to justify the belief claim. — fdrake
When you push on the pragmatics, you end up with something like a formal semantics of statements alone to justify the belief claim. — fdrake
...the world as a metalanguage... — fdrake
How should we understand use and mention? — frank
Smoke may be a sign of fire, but it is not a symbol of fire. Seems obvious to me. — Janus
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