Grice? — Banno
So that's not uncontroversial. — Banno
What an author intends by an utterance can vary over time, as that utterance is put to other uses. — Banno
NOS4A2 appears to think that there are two meanings to a given expression, that of the speaker and that of the listener, roughly the second response I described in my first reply here: "the meaning is some subjective response in their own mind". Nos says "meaning is generated at two or more different places, from two or more different perspectives, each furnished with their own levels of understanding", but what is happening is that the utterance is being used at two different places, for two different things. We don't have two distict uses, and a change in meaning, but just two differing uses. This should help dissipate the nonsense of "meaning never breaches the skull" and so on; no mysterious private mental substance that can't leak out of your ears - just what we do with words.
The way I look at it, not only do we have Gettier problems, we cannot even be certain that we really have Gettier problems! — sime
The assumption of static meanings is a foundational axiom of epistemology. If that axiom is rejected, then there cannot be a substantial and objective notion of epistemic error, beliefs cannot be identified with mental states and people can only be said to make predictions.
Second-order skepticism about the existence of static meaning is antithetical to first-order skepticism about the truth of our theories. — sime
Isn't it true that meaning persists over time and everything else that happens in the meantime is separate and distinct from what language itself has to convey? — Shawn
Since everything occurs in time — Hanover
Can you say exactly what constitutes a "static" meaning for you here? How long must it remain static? And how static must it remain- completely static? Mostly static? At least a little bit static?The assumption of static meanings is a foundational axiom of epistemology. If that axiom is rejected, then there cannot be a substantial and objective notion of epistemic error, beliefs cannot be identified with mental states and people can only be said to make predictions. — sime
, you're taking the time element too literally — Shawn
So, there is something mysterious about meaning after all? — Shawn
What Tom Storm seems to be alluding to is that we have beetles in boxes, pace Wittgenstein... — Shawn
Most of the folk here haven't yet even gotten to Christmas eve, and by the time they do Santa will have already visited us. — Banno
Seemingly I am for the notion that meaning persists over time. Namely, if Plato's Dialogues translation, still conveys the same meaning as it did some two millennia ago, then why would anyone think that meaning doesn't persist over time. — Shawn
Mother, bark and spit are just three of 23 words that researchers believe date back 15,000 years, making them the oldest known words. — Seeker
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