in language there is no word that means, "I'll stop at the store on the way home tonight and get milk." — Srap Tasmaner
Oddly enough, though, between two people, there often are such words. I go walking with a mate every Tuesday and he gets a text at some point during the day. 'Milk' means, 'Please stop at the store on the way home and get milk.' ' — mcdoodle
However, according to the context principle, words don't have any meaning on their own, — Fafner
The short answer is that the philosophical notion of "meaning" is pretty obscure (as it was argued for example by Quine in "Two Dogmas of Empiricism"), and the notion of the meaning of a single word is even more obscure. As I see it, the real question here is not whether words have "meaning" on their own, but what is meaning in the first place? What kind of philosophical work is the notion supposed to do? — Fafner
I should also add that I'm not objecting (on the behalf of the contextualist) that words can be said to have "meaning" in some non-philosophical sense of the term, — Fafner
Well, meaning is simply a mental association one makes with a term (for example). One can easily do that with a single term.
But it's a fact, philosophers did propose all sorts of definitions and theories for the notion of "meaning", so it does become pretty technical in many discussions.I don't buy that we're talking about some "special sense of the term 'meaning'" in philosophy. If Frege only cared about truth, then that apparently led him astray in his analysis of meaning.
That's fine, but in itself it doesn't have any philosophical significance. — Fafner
But it's a fact
Well, and biology gets things right about beetles and flowers - would you also say that it is philosophically significant?The philosophical significance is that it gets right what meaning is. — Terrapin Station
So far you are the one here who makes shit up. Do you have any empirical evidence that people always have mental associations with every word they know? That sounds to me like a totally far fetched claim. For example I have no idea what kind of things I associate with most of the words I know, except perhaps some faint images with familiar nouns. What mental associations do you have with a words like 'and' or 'because'?The point of philosophy isn't to make shit up that has no resemblance to what the world is really like. — Terrapin Station
There's no "correct" analysis of 'meaning', because there are many different senses in which this word is employed, inside and outside philosophy.Philosophers propose all sort of definitions and theories for the notion of meaning, sure, but they're not doing so by way of making shit up. They're trying to analyze what meaning is. Lots of philosophers are getting that wrong. — Terrapin Station
Well, and biology gets things right about beetles and flowers - would you also say that it is philosophically significant? — Fafner
Do you have any evidence that people always have mental associations with every word they know? — Fafner
There's no analysis of "meaning", — Fafner
What does it mean then to make a philosophical analysis of meaning? How should we decide who is right?Analysis of what meaning is isn't a field other than philosophy. What biology gets right about beetles and flowers is certainly important for philosophy of biology. Philosophers of biology aren't just going to start making shit up that has no connection to facts per biology. — Terrapin Station
I'm just saying that someone who's complaining about people making things up, shouldn't do the same thing himself...You're attempting to lecture me about what constitutes philosophy, and then all of sudden you start acting as if it's an empirical science? Seriously? — Terrapin Station
That's not an argument.Wow, the bullcrap is deep in this one. You'll fit in well here. — Terrapin Station
What's the alternative?but I don't think the "only sentences have meaning" view can be made to work. — Srap Tasmaner
And by the way, don't change my words when you quote me. I didn't say "There's no analysis of "meaning"" — Fafner
What does it mean then to make a philosophical analysis of meaning? How should we decide who is right? — Fafner
I'm just saying that someone who's complaining about people making things up, shouldn't do the same thing himself... — Fafner
That's not an argument. — Fafner
I don't see how this is relevant.Tell me something about your background with philosophy. I'm curious how this question can fit with the content and tenor of your other comments in the thread so far. — Terrapin Station
So on your account, do you want to say that all meaningful words must have mental associations? (because that's an empirical claim whether they do), and if they don't does it follow that they are not meaningful?And indeed I wasn't. I was talking about what meaning is, in general. I wasn't making up something that bears no resemblance to that and saying that it's meaning--"Oh, just in a special philosophical sense." — Terrapin Station
You are probably right, my fault.As I'm doing here, I highlighted your post and hit the "quote" button. It's not as if I retyped anything. You apparently edited your post after I quoted you. — Terrapin Station
I don't see how this is relevant. — Fafner
The alternative is to say that words do have sense, and that the sense of a word is the contribution it makes to the sense of a sentence in which it is used. — Srap Tasmaner
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