How might the utility of an idea be measured? — Josh Alfred
How might the utility of an idea be measured? I would consider applying Hedonic Calculus. Does that seem like the right direction? What about memetics and the principles behind MEME success? Such memes of today's techno-culture have very little utility, wouldn't you agree? — Josh Alfred
Hopefully, I can turn some of this into a blog. It will require much more contemplation, critical thinking, and questioning, though. I will link this page as a source on said blog, if it ever happens. :) — Josh Alfred
"Since, as per Wittgenstein, we can have our way with words, there's no point measuring utility - every word (idea) would be of equal utility, only the limits of imagination getting in the way of infinite utility." "Equal utility" because they can all be used in a worthy structure/syntax? I wonder what an idea without any utility would look like? Bringing up any idea kind of engages the idea with some kind of importance/utility.
I think Chomsky's famous non-grammatical sentence is a case when words with out "proper syntax" lack utility. WIKI - "Colorless green ideas sleep furiously is a sentence composed by Noam Chomsky in his 1957 book Syntactic Structures as an example of a sentence that is grammatically correct, but semantically nonsensical."
Its cool to think that the structure of a sentence/idea can add to its utility. Is there any reading you might suggest that works with the this and/or the main thesis? — Josh Alfred
How might the utility of an idea be measured? — Josh Alfred
Go Wittgenstein: a word can be used in any way one wishes - the sky's the limit. — TheMadFool
The number of contexts in which the idea is relevant and the resulting explanantory power from understanding the idea. Like, Maxwell's equations would be the gold standard I'd imagine.How might the utility of an idea be measured? I would consider applying Hedonic Calculus. Does that seem like the right direction? What about memetics and the principles behind MEME success? Such memes of today's techno-culture have very little utility, wouldn't you agree? — Josh Alfred
Go Wittgenstein: a word can be used in any way one wishes - the sky's the limit.
— TheMadFool
That was not Wittgenstein; that was Humpty Dumpty. — Banno
What about memetics and the principles behind MEME success? Such memes of today's techno-culture have very little utility, wouldn't you agree? — Josh Alfred
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