Not something essentially different, and hence (though this isn't Elgin's point) not an excuse to impute symbolic thinking (or an alleged cousin of it) anthropomorphically. — bongo fury
...the world as a metalanguage...
— fdrake
To be clear, the metalanguage is on the left, and contains the truth predicate. The object language is on the right. So the object language is the world. — Banno
It doesn't matter that it's natural language, where the layers aren't as clear cut as for Tarski. There's still no need to confuse use vs mention, logical or grammatical subject vs subject-matter, state of affairs or disquotation as in statement vs state of affairs or disquotation as in event. — bongo fury
Is this what you had in mind?When you push on the pragmatics, you end up with something like a formal semantics of statements alone to justify the belief claim. — fdrake
Use is deploying a word, phrase, sentence, group or groups of sentences to refer, command, entreat, explain or whatever else we do with words, phrases, sentences or groups of sentences. — Janus
I take it you mean the object language considered as a whole domain of symbols plus its own semantic world of denoted objects comprises the semantic world of the metalanguage? — bongo fury
So... you think I am jumbling use and mention? — Banno
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 — bongo fury
I want to be clear about this. "The cup is on the table" can be dealt with in two ways. We can talk about it, saying things like "The cup is on the table" contains six words, or "The cup is on the table" is true; or we can use it to show that the cup is on the table.
That's not an ambiguity.
One can use a screw driver to drive a screw, or one can put it away into the toolbox. That does not make the use of a screwdriver ambiguous. — Banno
I'd like you to fill this out. — Banno
So the object language is the world. — Banno
The missing piece may be that the world is, in Davidson's words, always and already interpreted. The illocution of making statements involves representing the world in words - that's what the game is. — Banno
The missing piece may be that the world is, in Davidson's words, always and already interpreted. The illocution of making statements involves representing the world in words - that's what the game is. — Banno
I was responding to Bongo Fury's comment that confusion of use and mention had reached pandemic status. I was asking for his view of it to set alongside Banno's (which is kind of unique, I think). — frank
"The cup is on the table" can be dealt with in two ways. We can talk about it, saying things like "The cup is on the table" contains six words, or "The cup is on the table" is true; or we can use it to show that the cup is on the table.
That's not an ambiguity. — Banno
use it [the sentence] to show that the cup is on the table. — Banno
To support your point you might present an aspect of the world that is not covered by our language. — Banno
Pointing out that words present the world, that the world is what is the case, is not claiming that there are things we do not know. — Banno
Solaris(1972) was better. — Banno
So they probably hope the use-mention distinction is at least half-way not about pointing. — bongo fury
I'm not saying these supposed hidden parts of the world are necessarily untranslatable... — frank
When you push on the pragmatics, you end up with something like a formal semantics of statements alone to justify the belief claim. — fdrake
Well, if it is not propositional, what is it? What other form could it have? And even if there is some alternative form, that form must be capable of interpretation in propositional form. If it were not, then we would have no grounds for referring to it as "content".I don't see why that should make the content of that tacit interpretation propositional or even just language-like. — fdrake
I think smoke being a sign of fire, and the like, are different than, for example a letter symbolizing a sound or a sound symbolizing an object. I would agree they are related of course, you might say symbolizing evolves out of signifying — Janus
...that form must be capable of interpretation in propositional form. — Banno
All I need is the movie to demonstrate that it's conceivable that there are aspects of the world that can't be pointed to by a sentence of English. — frank
By the way, just so you know better, I'm not using "correlations" as you're using "propositions"... not even close. — creativesoul
I would agree that language-less belief is capable of being talked about and our talking about it has propositional form. — creativesoul
I would agree that language-less belief is capable of being talked about and our talking about it has propositional form.
— creativesoul
Then what are we arguing about? — Banno
Well, if it is not propositional, what is it? What other form could it have? And even if there is some alternative form, that form must be capable of interpretation in propositional form. If it were not, then we would have no grounds for referring to it as "content". — Banno
...that form must be capable of interpretation in propositional form... — Banno
If your correlations cannot be put into the form of a proposition, then what are they? — Banno
I would agree that smoke being a sign of fire is different than marks symbolizing, referencing, picking out, etc., other things.
What's interesting to me though, is exactly how much they are alike.
They both require a creature capable of drawing correlations between different things. They both require something to become sign/symbol, something to become significant/symbolized, and a creature capable of drawing correlations between them. — creativesoul
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