Why are humans so concerned about whether their many, highly elaborated languages, or even simple languages, are the sole property of themselves? "Only humans... do such and such" seems to suggest an insecurity about their worth. That bees, dolphins, parrots, border collies and the British all exhibit language seems like more a cause for celebration than unease. — Bitter Crank
This needs to be further developed, but I see it as related to the difference between signalling, which lacks abstraction. — Marchesk
When our retriever wants to go outside in the morning, the first step is a gentle whine. If nothing happens this is followed by nose poking. Then louder whining, finally a loud bark in one's face. — Bitter Crank
How would dolphin researchers verify that dolphins did possess language? They would do so by showing that dolphin sounds convey concepts. — Marchesk
Is conveying concepts not a use? — unenlightened
see the Wittgenstein project here as part of his attempt to undo the Cartesian error of identification as 'thinking thing' rather than 'doing thing'. — unenlightened
My suspicion is that use (alone) cannot explain abstract thought (or metaphor), and that's what I'm fumbling to get at. — Marchesk
But why not? What is it about concept use that puts the use-theory into question? — StreetlightX
Perhaps try a syllogism? (1)Meaning-as-use says... (2)But... (3)Therefore...? Fill in the ellipses? — StreetlightX
Meaning-is-use says meaning is the way words are used in the context of a language game. — Marchesk
But, word use alone cannot explain the heavy use of universals, metaphors, math and logic in human language games.
The correct formulation (if we're going by Wittgenstein) is "the meaning of a word is its use in the language". — Michael
That formulation is trivial. Of course "Chair" means the universal of chairs in English, because we arbitrarily (or rather through evolution of English) decided to denote that word as being such.
That's very different from saying that the meaning behind the word is merely the use of it. — Marchesk
What's the difference between saying "the meaning of a word is its use" and "the meaning behind a word is its use"? — Michael
...language needs to be defined. — Marchesk
Thus language is not about a transfer of some essence of conceptual meaning from my inner world to your inner world, but something that operates in the physical world. — unenlightened
When translating words from another language, we aren't translating its use, we are translating its meaning, or what it is referring to. — Harry Hindu
When translating words from another language, we aren't translating its use, we are translating its meaning, or what it is referring to. — Harry Hindu
2. But, word use alone cannot explain the existence of universals, metaphors, math and logic in human language games. — Marchesk
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