I don't think there is such a strong difference in kind between sentences and words. — Banno
Also it is obvious to anyone with a pulse that...
— StreetlightX
:sweat: You guys are killing me. — Caldwell
Maybe the mistake I'm worried about is lumping together all religious speech; there are lots of different sorts of things one might say, that could count as religious, and some of them connect rather clearly to practice and some quite a bit less clearly. — Srap Tasmaner
It seems weird to refer to language-games without reference to correctness, and it seems self-sealing. — Sam26
I can always say someone else's language-game isn't a language-game, because the word is not doing anything. — Sam26
You can't correctly be said to know you have an itch. — Banno
What is the sense of "knowledge like that of an object"?... I believe that my pain can be known in the exact same sense that any other object can be known: perceived via the senses and explained rationally by the intellect. — Olivier5
For how can I go so far as to try to use language to get between pain and its expression? — Witt, PI #245
Does [You can't correctly be said to know you have an itch. @Banno] mean it's incorrect to say I know I have a headache? "Incorrect" how? In the sense that it's false? Or does "I know I have a headache", despite appearances, have no truth-value? — Srap Tasmaner
In what context would we say "I know I have a headache."? Maybe when you've made it aware to me that you have a headache, then, when I see you a little while later and you have an ice pack on your knee, and I point to your head and shrug, saying "Don't you have a headache?", you might look at me (like I'm an idiot) and say "I know I have a headache." -- but this is in the sense of "Duh, I know", as in the use (grammatical category) of: I am aware. — Antony Nickles
Does that mean it's incorrectto say I know I have a headache? "Incorrect" how? — Srap Tasmaner
Language-games are more or less open-ended...
Whether or not a word is doing something is determined from within the game itself. — Fooloso4
It would be brave indeed to claim that any use is determinate. — Banno
I’m fairly sure I know what you mean by this: that it would be brave to claim that any meaning is determinate, or that we can be certain to understand any use of language. But isn’t that just what we do everyday? I think the bar is set too high here on knowledge/certainty; a philosophical use of these terms. — Luke
And I think this puts the lie to the notion that language games are rules-based. That one is following a rule is not dependent on one being able to state that rule, but is found in what one does. — Banno
The method Witt uses in imagining a context for an expression is to show that the sentence is meaningful, — Antony Nickles
Suppose I claim to know I have five dollars, but refuse to open my wallet in justification. It would be quite reasonable for you to doubt my claim. — Banno
"I know I have and itch" doesn't achieve the status of being eligible for a truth value, to use your somewhat constipated term, becasue it is not grammatically a statement. It's not like "Paris is the capital of France"; Nor "Paris is the capital of Germany"; but more like "Paris is the capital of lemongrass". — Banno
In the case of a pain, were the only justification is the pain itself, it is simply not possible to provide the necessary evidence. — Banno
The method Witt uses in imagining a context for an expression is to show that the sentence is meaningful,
— Antony Nickles
Was it meaningless when originally said here a few pages back? — Srap Tasmaner
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