I’d respond that that is probably your view as well. It was also mine when I was in college. Took me awhile to realize that it was a product of my own ignorance rather than some fault of philosophy. — Joshs
Is there a philosophical argument that attempts to prove that language & thought are the same? — Agent Smith
I look from the scientific side. Not the philosophic side. — Hillary
That's just wrong. Get a hold of How to do things with words. Learn something new.Language doesn't enact realities. It's merely a means of reinforcing and express them. — Hillary
Language doesn't enact realities. It's merely a means of reinforcing and express them. — Hillary
language plays a minor role in the world of developing ideas. — Hillary
Math is a language. — Hillary
Math is just a means to express science quantitatively. — Hillary
As evidence, consider:
The reality of this conversation is enacted via language.
The reality of a promise or a command are enacted via language.
The reality of such institutional entities as money, property, or marriage are enacted via language. — Banno
I disagree with your contention that it does not enact realities. — Banno
If I hadn't learned English, the connection would not be made. No enactive activity would take place. — Hillary
Words are not just names used to passively set out how things are. We make statements, we ask questions, we give commands - much more than just saying something, our utterances are acts.
Consider:
"I now pronounce you husband and wife"
"I name this ship the Queen Elizabeth"
"I give and bequeath my watch to my brother"
"I bet you a fiver it rains tomorrow"
These are not mere descriptions. They are what Austin called performative utterances. Each makes something the case; that the couple are married, the ship named, the ownership of the watch passed on and the bet offered, if not accepted.
Notice that such utterances are not either true or false; if they misfire, it is in some other way than by truth value. — Banno
Language can be used to describe. It can also be used to enact. "I name this ship the Black Pearl" makes it true that the ship is named the Black Pearl. "I promise to see you tomorrow" makes it the case that I have promised to see you tomorrow. — Banno
Indeed, that is how we do things with words. They are not only descriptions. — Banno
"I promise to meet with you next Tuesday."
With that very utterance, the promise is made, and the obligation created. Uttering the sentence "I promise to meet with you next Tuesday" counts as placing myself under the obligation to meet with you next Tuesday.
Promises are an example of a type of performative utterance that makes something the case. — Banno
But the enactivation is not contained in them. They can cause enactment, but do they themselves enact? — Hillary
does your philosophy have psychological underpinnings? — Agent Smith
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