What? It's the name of a color. They make a crayon. I didn't get to label it. I maintain that this phrase above is never resident in some one's mind during an internal process of understanding things. No one thinks to themselves in a convoluted way. The meaning is what you do with it with respect to the context and any ceremonial entailments. How do you describe what it is to mean something? Seems thread relevant.The meaning of french grey is what you do with it; ordering and applying a colour that is pleasing. — Banno
As one example, the pain or pleasure I might at one moment associate with a given color due to my own idiosyncratic experiences - with this color momentarily leading my thoughts to a certain outcome of affect and, in so governing my thoughts' intentionality, granting this color a momentary meaning to me - will be a fully private occurrence. That the color orange momentarily means putrid to me on grounds that it vividly reminds me of an orange I one ate that was spoiled will be a meaning of the color orange that is fully private to me. — javra
One issue I have with Wittgenstein's claim that meaning is use is that even definitions viewed in terms of essences is, after all, use of a word to stand for a certain idea or object. I don't recall anyone attempting to clarify how Wittgenstein's theory differs in a significant way from essence-based definitions which are, bottom line, also use. — TheMadFool
Thank you for addressing the example I gave. Since you claim it to be plausible, you didn’t give me much to argue against, for I too find it quite plausible. — javra
BTW, do you by “homunculus” simply intend a euphemism for “consciousness”? The little person within the total person that itself has a littler person within, and so on ad infinitum, is not something I can fathom anyone believing in.
At the moment, don’t have much interest in arguing one way or another about the reality of consciousnesses. But I thought I’d ask, since I am curious. — javra
One issue I have with Wittgenstein's claim that meaning is use is that even definitions viewed in terms of essences is, after all, use of a word to stand for a certain idea or object. I don't recall anyone attempting to clarify how Wittgenstein's theory differs in a significant way from essence-based definitions which are, bottom line, also use.
— TheMadFool
I think of W as just one slap in the face among others, to wake foolosophers up from a dream. Some of his early metaphors still hold, IMO. The ladder is disposable. The evidence of something like understanding Wittgenstein is talking less silly talk. Definitions can still be useful, but they are taken far less seriously than a certain kind of philosopher might want to take them (as if they were formal definitions that might be used in a mathematical proof.). I think the big point is that meaning is out there with them not in here with me. No one cares about my 'definition' of [choose a sound-mark]. Why should they? I don't decide what 'justice' or 'knowledge' or 'science' means, though I can bark and squeak like the rest on such matters. Yeah, a few of us bark and squeak so well that others' barks and squeaks come to resemble our own stolen noises. But the main thing is to just look and listen at what's going on ('meaning is use' blah blah blah.) — Zugzwang
What then is time? If no one asks me, I know what it is. If I wish to explain it to him who asks, I do not know. — St. Augustine (on time)
Lao Tzu - The Tao that can be spoken is not the eternal Tao.
Some guy - Hey, Lao Tzu, you're talking about something that can't be talked about. What's with that?
Lao Tzu - Tao as a thing is entirely illusive and evasive. Evasive and illusive. In it there is image. Illusive and evasive. In it there is thinghood. Dark and dim.
Some guy - This is such bullshit.
Lao Tzu - Go fuck yourself. — T Clark
I reckon the grear Lao Tzu is referring to what I suppose is some kind of God-like entity or a Cosmic Principle that's behind all there is, every object, every phenomenon, basically everything, with the Tao. — TheMadFool
He picked "Tao" for some reason now lost to history. — TheMadFool
What's important to note here is Lao Tzu is employing apophasis to get us to realize what the Tao is. — TheMadFool
What's going on? — TheMadFool
I read the OP as asking whether there are things we can't describe in the English language and you guys are droning on about how we use language. — Hanover
representational symbols with 100% accuracy — Hanover
I think that such a starting point should only be seen provisionally, and as an artificial imposition on what is otherwise a dynamic flux.I get what you're saying, but unless one assumes that all life is endowed with language, then language appeared at some point in time after life appeared. — javra
But most things that seem new are actually made of old, already existing things.Besides, rare as they might be, novums - new features - perpetually occur, thereby the evolution of any living language, and how are novums not invented?
don't see how we can discuss the subject of the OP without talking about how we use language. — T Clark
Describing something doesn't mean representing something "with 100% accuracy." Red Delicious apple. About 3 inches diameter. Red. I don't normally need to count how many seeds. — T Clark
My point us that my experience of the apple can never be conveyed to you. — Hanover
Lao Tzu - The Tao that can be spoken is not the eternal Tao.
Some guy - Hey, Lao Tzu, you're talking about something that can't be talked about. What's with that?
Lao Tzu - Tao as a thing is entirely illusive and evasive. Evasive and illusive. In it there is image. Illusive and evasive. In it there is thinghood. Dark and dim.
Some guy - This is such bullshit.
Lao Tzu - Go fuck yourself. — T Clark
Wittgenstein, it seems, was especially affected by the word "game." He realized that, in truth, no one really knows how to define it but then everyone uses it and uses it correctly. It's actually a paradox very similar to St. Augustine's time paradox:
What then is time? If no one asks me, I know what it is. If I wish to explain it to him who asks, I do not know.
— St. Augustine (on time) — TheMadFool
We can conceive of machinery that would record your experience and make it available to others, so it's metaphysically possible. Whether that's physically possible in this world, we don't know yet. — frank
The OP is ambiguous to the extent one wonders if it's asking (1) whether English in particular offers limitations in what it can describe as opposed to what might be only explainable in French, for example or (2) whether certain concepts are ineffable and not reducible to langauge. — Hanover
As to (1), I think the consensus is no, that all langauges in principle can equally explain things, even if it requires more words or longer explanations. — Hanover
What you've addressed iare the sociological biases inherent in language, which I'd agree with. If our houses are built for our particular needs, I can imagine langauge would be similar. I don't think that what I've said regarding #1 impacts #2, but i can see debate there. — Hanover
(2) whether certain concepts are ineffable and not reducible to langauge. — Hanover
As to (2), I've argued they are, and that's what I addressed. — Hanover
Nicely done, TC. It does however make me feel quite justified in walking away from any kind of fathomless, inscrutable writings. What possible use can they have (for me)?
Have to say (and this is not a criticism) I find it interesting that you can reconcile this with your model of pragmatism. — Tom Storm
But I take the perception as all encompassing, not limited to just the apple I perceive, with its color, snell, etc.., but the itch on my foot, the anxiety of my overdue bill, the calm from the sound of the rain, etc. all within the state of the perception at that second We have no known symbolic feed of that from me to you like we do "apple" or even through photographic or audio representations.
If you mean by "metaphysically" possible, to mean "hypothetically" or "imaginable," perhaps, but i don't think it's physically possible and it does strain the imagination. — Hanover
I reckon the grear Lao Tzu is referring to what I suppose is some kind of God-like entity or a Cosmic Principle that's behind all there is, every object, every phenomenon, basically everything, with the Tao.
— TheMadFool
I'm reluctant to get into a discussion about that here — T Clark
"Tao" means "way." "Te" sort of means "virtue." "Ching" means book. Tao Te Ching means the book of the way and virtue, more or less. — T Clark
I think you're right, but I've always preferred to think about it as a joke Lao Tzu is telling. — T Clark
As I noted, I think you have a fairly good idea of what is going on. Methinks the laddie doth protest too much. — T Clark
Not to have you do my research for me, but do you have a quote from Kierkegaard for that? — Hanover
Wittgenstein, it seems, was especially affected by the word "game." He realized that, in truth, no one really knows how to define it but then everyone uses it and uses it correctly. It's actually a paradox very similar to St. Augustine's time paradox:
What then is time? If no one asks me, I know what it is. If I wish to explain it to him who asks, I do not know.
— St. Augustine (on time)
— TheMadFool
Good quote. That's W in a nutshell, perhaps. 'Knowing what it is' is something banal like knowing how and when to invoke and respond to the familiar token. We can know what time it is without knowing what time is (if we insist on believing that time must be something in the first place...something more than a useful token.) — Zugzwang
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