Frodo is a hobbit, "Frodo" is a word. Clearly there are two different referents. — Michael
When I use the name "Frodo" I am referring to the hobbit, not to the word "Frodo" or my idea of Frodo. — Michael
Does this entail realism regarding Frodo? Of course not. Frodo is not ontologically-independent of our language and our ideas. — Michael
First, words are our tools...
Secondly, words are not (except in their own little corner) facts or things:...
...these surely are likely to be more sound, since they have stood up to the long test of the survival of the fittest, and more subtle, at least in all ordinary and reasonably practical matters...
I see, you did not take my advice on how NOT to explain things with negatives — god must be atheist
You used two negatives with one blurred, muddled, ineffectual, vague positive claim. — god must be atheist
So... I don't know your point, until you state it in ordinary language. Simple, ordinary, common language. — god must be atheist
I see, you did not take my advice on how NOT to explain things with negatives - how not to explain a thing by saying what it is not. You used two negatives with one blurred, muddled, ineffectual, vague positive claim. So... I don't know your point, until you state it in oridnary language. Simple, ordinary, common language. — god must be atheist
Look me in the eye and claim this isn't bullshitting. I don't mean can you rationalize it either. Rather, is there really information content that could be further examined? In a meaningful way; as it applies to any philosophical problem called X. X=?..for different language in different situations... — Antony Nickles
"I'm only saying that people refer, it's is an act that people do. They can refer with words, as is often the case, or with gestures. — Manuel
Either words refer or they don't. — Manuel
@bongo fury
That Frodo depends on words isn't that "Frodo" refers to words. "Frodo" refers to a hobbit, and hobbits exist only in a fictional piece of writing. — Michael
Meta-semantics? — Cheshire
First, words are our tools...
Secondly, words are not (except in their own little corner) facts or things:...
...these surely are likely to be more sound, since they have stood up to the long test of the survival of the fittest, and more subtle, at least in all ordinary and reasonably practical matters... — Austin
The second [ quote ] both negates it and muddies the water. — Cheshire
The third explains... it's authoritarian dismissal as the emperor's new wardrobe and served to maintain the religious madness we are still trying to cure. Did that make sense? Not asking for agreement; just is it a coherent claim about a thing? — Cheshire
The point I should be making is that if you can't say something coherent about simply 'words', then stop. — Cheshire
That Frodo depends on words isn't that "Frodo" refers to words. — Michael
"Frodo" refers to a hobbit, — Michael
and hobbits exist only in a fictional piece of writing. — Michael
OLP makes claims about the ordinary (non-metaphysical, let's say) criteria we have for different language in different situations, for the purpose of shedding light on philosophical problems. — Tony Nickles
Look me in the eye and claim this isn't bullshitting. I don't mean can you rationalize it either. Rather, is there really information content that could be further examined? In a meaningful way; as it applies to any philosophical problem called X. X=? — Cheshire
"What are the "Ordinary Language Philosophy" solutions to common philosophical problems? — Chaz
OLP informs what it means to say "I know"? People have been arguing about what it is "I know" means. The philosophical problem best addressed by OLP is the phrase "I know". Are any of these true statements?I edited that comment to say I provided Malcolm's example (about "I know") above, and Austin's as well. — Antony Nickles
The desire for "coherency" and the attitude that words are simple, are some of the reasons philosophy has theories of language (all of it), and meaning (in every case, for every thing). Your unwillingness to look further may hide the need for a certain answer. — Antony Nickles
Russell is combining 'see' into a literal and non-literal sense to describe a concept.A favorite example of the OLPers was the claim made by Russell that, properly speaking, we do not see any physical objects at all – we only see parts of our brains. Yet, according to the way the word 'see' is used, we typically never see our brains, but do see physical objects. So what can Russell mean? In reflecting on what he could mean by this, as an exercise, you might come to understand an example of what the OLPer is talking about. — Snakes Alive
OLP informs what it means to say "I know"? — Cheshire
People have been arguing about what it is "I know" means. — Cheshire
The philosophical problem best addressed by OLP is the phrase "I know". — Cheshire
Yeah, that could be attempted trying to figure out what are the instances in which people use words to either refer or shout or anything else people do with words. — Manuel
on inspection, the philosopher is either confused, or is expressing nascently some desire to refer to what is normally called a fox using a different word, 'wolf' – for some reason. Hence the issue, if there is one, is linguistic. — Snakes Alive
The belief, I do have, (all the time) is that language intends some coding and decoding of information. The success of the sounds to carry information was successful prior to talking about it in a strange way. — Cheshire
If we didn't know what we were saying(when you say it), then we couldn't talk about it; could we? — Cheshire
I'm skeptical of claims that regard insight into meaning delivered in the most difficult to comprehend way. — Cheshire
some how this thread defies a desire to be understood. — Cheshire
I think that topics like "what it's like", "mind-body problem" and a few others can be, if not solved, then thought about properly using ordinary language. But these issues continue going. — Manuel
And who belongs in OLP is also a bit messy. As you say, Austin, Strawson and other get grouped under this heading. At the same time, it seems to me as if some facets OLP are be closely related to logical positivism. Carnap comes to mind as someone who tried to use ordinary language to solve "big problems". Also A.J. Ayer. — Manuel
This thread is now an excellent example of why ordinary language philosophy is both important and useful. Especially the bit about focusing on specifics. — Banno
But Wittgenstein (and later Cavell) are able to show that there is a truth to skepticism, that knowledge is limited--we are separate (see The Claim of Reason). Now this is not "linguistic"; it is part of the human condition. — Antony Nickles
Or get stuck on a raft with Banno and mock each other while drifting, slowly, nowhere.. — Antony Nickles
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