Who has the power to have the final say in what words mean or refer to? — Andrew4Handel
Can you give examples? — Andrew4Handel
I don't think you can replace self-referential talk. — Andrew4Handel
The word "self" (like "god") exists and we use – "talk about" – it meaningfully and incessantly (re: Meinong's Jungle, Witty's language games, etc). — 180 Proof
In my view, we as a community do this. We always inherit cultural software from previous generations (down to the meanings of the words we use), and then we modify this heritage (adapting to life today ) and finally pass it on. — plaque flag
I personally think the extension of a word can be related to somebody's' personal web of experience and words can combine to make new meanings for the individual. — Andrew4Handel
I don't know whether you or anyone else is saying that words are deterministic and meanings inflexible. — Andrew4Handel
I feel like you have to be the arbiter of what you mean because how else can you decide what to say and know what you mean and want to convey? — Andrew4Handel
You intend to convey some kind of meaning but who is to blame when meaning fails to be transmitted? — Andrew4Handel
It's true that you can often provide elaboration. But you can't use slurs or cry fire or decide that words mean whatever you want them to mean. You can twist things a little bit if you are careful and charismatic. — plaque flag
So it seems very easy to create a unique but meaningful sentence. — Andrew4Handel
I think what someone means to say is contextual and will derive meaning from their intentions as well. — Andrew4Handel
Strictly speaking, I wouldn't include intentions inasmuch as they are hidden. Context and gesture and everything manifest would count though, in my opinion.
It's not a big deal, but I like to focus on meaning as between people. — plaque flag
I am saying this general now to this thread topic and my thread on the privacy of subjective states. I don't believe mental states can be publically arbitrated meaningfully. It would seem to lead to denying one's own reality and being subservient to the mob. — Andrew4Handel
Who am I?
I'm part of this group, and I'm this individual. — frank
I think we can only fight for things, for reality by asserting the truth of our identity not by trying to fit in with some kind of groupthink accepted paradigm. — Andrew4Handel
Consider if you woke up in an emergency room with no memory of who you are. — frank
The structure of selfhood is there, but nothing is filled in. Maybe you were born with this blueprint? — frank
So how does someone have the final say on what we mean by "self" or "free will" — Andrew4Handel
It just explains the fact of the carrier of my consciousness, my physical body. The body should not be confused with the consciousness. It's like confusing a program running on a computer with the computer itself." — Andrew4Handel
But the very locution 'away from "nature" and "towards" "Spirit," Geist…' seems to indicate that there is something nonnatural about Spirit. It seems to suggest that Spirit ‘transcends’ nature and such transcendence of nature seems to imply a break with nature. Of course, as is well known, Hegel sees Geist as a sublation or Aufhebung of nature. But the term sublation implies that what is sublated, nature, is preserved within that which
sublates it, Geist. The term sublation never implies a breach. Thus Geist develops out of nature, whilst preserving nature, and does not leave it behind. Geist is a modification of nature. — plaque flag
All I'm saying is that the body is conscious. You can lose parts of the body and it will be conscious. Lose an indispensable part of the brain and the body will no longer be conscious.
All of this we know from common knowledge derived from the experiences of others or perhaps your own experience if you are somehow involved in medicine or witnessed the demise of an unfortunate family member or whatever. — Janus
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