The reason people use words is to communicate. How they use the words is what they communicate. You have an idea you want to communicate and if you don't use the words just right, then you end up not communicating at all.I don't see the relevance of the question. The reason people use words has nothing to do with how words come to mean. — StreetlightX
What reason would you use words at all if not to communicate their meaning as understood in the dictionary? — Harry Hindu
I would be stopping myself because when I communicate, it is my intention that others understand me. If I just used any scribble to meaning anything then I wouldn't be communicating.And indeed you can do that. Who would be stopping you? — Terrapin Station
The reason people use words is to communicate. How they use the words is what they communicate. You have an idea you want to communicate and if you don't use the words just right, then you end up not communicating at all. — Harry Hindu
I would be stopping myself because when I communicate, it is my intention that others understand me. If I just used any scribble to meaning anything then I wouldn't be communicating. — Harry Hindu
The reason people use words is to communicate. How they use the words is what they communicate. You have an idea you want to communicate and if you don't use the words just right, then you end up not communicating at all. — Harry Hindu
But why would I do that? My point is that words are only for communicating with others. Why would I need to communicate an idea that isn't composed of words with words to myself? I would simply think it without any use of words.Sure, you could stop yourself, but if you wanted to use words in some idiosyncratic way that only you understand, you could do that, too. — Terrapin Station
But this doesn't make the color yellow itself into a symbol for ripeness. Suppose a monkey comes to expect a banana whenever it sees a yellow object. Would we say that when the monkey sees a yellow ball it believes that the ball is ripe? Or does it believe falsely that the ball is ripe banana? From the example alone it is simply not clear what is supposed to be represented by what.Isn't he saying via experience? Via eating a number of bananas, you notice a correlation between the color and the ripeness. — Terrapin Station
There is more to a banana that just it's color. It also has a shape that isn't the shape of a ball. It also has a particular texture. It's shape, texture and color is what defines it as a banana. We have different senses that allow us to make these distinctions between yellow balls and yellow bananas.But this doesn't make the color yellow itself into a symbol for ripeness. Suppose a monkey comes to expect a banana whenever it sees a yellow object. Would we say that when the monkey sees a yellow ball that it comes to believe that the ball is ripe? Or does it believe falsely that the ball is ripe banana? From the example alone it is simply not clear what is supposed to represent what. — Fafner
But this doesn't make the color yellow itself into a symbol for ripeness. — Fafner
I'm afraid I don't get your point.Why would you be mentally bracketing the color yellow as if it's something independent? The idea is yellow bananas versus green or dark brown/black bananas. — Terrapin Station
Ridiculous. If meaning is use, then how words come to mean anything is how they are employed. People change the usage of words, therefore their meaning, and that word now has come to mean something else (like slang) and then used by others in that way.Again, this is irrelevant to a thesis about how words come to mean. How words come to mean, and how those meanings are employed, are two entirely different issues. — StreetlightX
I'm afraid I don't get your point. — Fafner
So by "language game" he meant a method of representation? — Mongrel
We can also think of the whole process of using words in (2) [ a four-word language] as one of those games by means of which children learn their native language. I will call these games 'language-games' and will sometimes speak of a primitive language as a language-game.
And the processes of naming the stones and of repeating words after someone might also be called language-games. Think of certain uses that are made of words in games like ring-a-ring-roses.
I shall also call the whole, consisting of language and the activities into which it is woven, a 'language-game'. — Witt
You responded as if we were saying something about the color yellow (in general, regardless of where it occurs) rather than saying something about yellow bananas. — Terrapin Station
There is more to a banana that just it's color. It also has a shape that isn't the shape of a ball. It also has a particular texture. It's shape, texture and color is what defines it as a banana. We have different senses that allow us to make these distinctions between yellow balls and yellow bananas. — Harry Hindu
No, 'representing' is only one kind of language game (in Wittgenstein's sense) but there could be many others. However if we talk about 'meaning' - in the sense of a word standing for a thing - then I think the question of representation is the central one (but of course language has many other functions other than to represent things).So by "language game" he meant a method of representation? — Mongrel
Of course. So in the quote you put up, by "our method of representation," he means the language game in play when we talk about fictional things. Where is the representation exactly? — Mongrel
Right. Talk about meters is a means of representation. The language game in which we talk about meters is a means of representation. Right? — Mongrel
If meaning is use, then I can use the word "meaning" in a particular way, and that is what it means. — Harry Hindu
‘And only one for birthday presents, you know. There’s glory for you!’
‘I don’t know what you mean by “glory,”’ Alice said.
Humpty Dumpty smiled contemptuously. ‘Of course you don’t—till I tell you. I meant “there’s a nice knock-down argument for you!”’
‘But “glory” doesn’t mean “a nice knock-down argument,”’ Alice objected.
‘When I use a word,’ Humpty Dumpty said in rather a scornful tone, ‘it means just what I choose it to mean—neither more nor less.’
‘The question is,’ said Alice, ‘whether you can make words mean so many different things.’
‘The question is,’ said Humpty Dumpty, ‘which is to be master—that’s all.’
46. What lies behind the idea that names really signify simples?--
Socrates says in the Theaetetus: "If I make no mistake, I have heard some people say this: there is no definition of the primary elements--so to speak--out of which we and everything else are composed; for everything that exists in its own right can only be named, no other determination is possible, neither that it is nor that it is not ... But what exists in its own right has to be ... named without any other determination. In consequence it is impossible to give an account of any primary element; for it, nothing is possible but the bare name; its name is all it has. But just as what consists of these primary elements is itself complex, so the names of the elements become descriptive language by being compounded together. For the essence of speech is the composition of names."
Both Russell's 'individuals' and my 'objects' (Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus) were such primary elements.
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