A definition of a philosophical concept might be required at the beginning of a discussion only in the case that the term is equivocal. — Jamal
It’s possible that T Clark’s approach is more relevant than I thought, although it’s an approach to analyzing TPF discussions in terms of psychology rather than analyzing definition itself. What I mean is, I’ve noticed that people are disagreeing in what seems a temperamental or polarized way rather than substantively. It’s not clear that, for example, @Janus and @Isaac, or @T Clark and I, would really differ much given an actual discussion to look at, and what differences there would be might be to do with temperamental levels of tolerance for troublemaking. — Jamal
I fall back on my experience here on the forum as the basis for my response - many discussions quickly descend into confusion and lack of direction caused by lack of agreement on what words mean. Prime examples are "consciousness," "metaphysics," "truth," and "reality," but there are plenty more. — T Clark
This isn't the place to take up the subject, but I don't understand your objection to "personalizing" philosophical issues. As I've noted before, one of the goals of philosophy is self-awareness. For me it is the primary goal. This is certainly true of eastern philosophies, but also western ones. After all, some guy supposedly said "The unexamined life is not worth living." The point, at least the only point, isn't to discuss ideas and reason, we're also here to examine our lives. — T Clark
To restrict the use of a term at the beginning is to shut down the philosophy. I understand your position. My last post was a response to the post of yours in which you appeared to conflate definitions at the beginning of a discussion with definitions as an aim. This is the crucial point. — Jamal
I have explained as clearly as I can what I think is wrong with personalizing everything, so I don’t think I’ll say any more on it. — Jamal
a lot of the discussions on the forum stink because people never get beyond disagreeing on definitions. — T Clark
"truth," — T Clark
"P" is true IFF P
The Tortoise points out that each of the terms here must also be defined, if we are to achieve certainty. And down the rabbit hole they fall."a very large herbivorous mammal of the family Elephantidae, the only extant family of proboscideans and comprising the genera Loxodonta (African elephants) and Elephas (Asian elephants): Elephants of all species are characterized by a long, prehensile trunk formed of the nose and upper lip, pillarlike legs, and prominent tusks, which are possessed by both sexes of Loxodonta and just the males of Elephas." — frank
Look up the definition of a word in the dictionary.
Then look up the definition of each of the words in that definition.
Iterate.
Given that there are a finite number of words in the dictionary, the process will eventually lead to repetition.
If one's goal were to understand a word, one might suppose that one must first understand the words in its definition. But this process is circular.
There must, therefore, be a way of understanding a word that is not given by providing its definition.
Now this seems quite obvious; and yet so many begin their discussion with "let's first define our terms". — Banno
"It can be done," said Achilles. "It has been done! Solvitur ambulando. — Lewis Carroll
am not sure if frank is amongst them - think that a good definition fixes the referent of the term involved, in such a way that doubt is not possible — Banno
...extensional definitions... — frank
I don't think this model of language as moving information between minds will work. Think I've mentioned this before. Language is constructed socially, and minds are as much a part of that construction as words....communication between minds... — frank
...and so that sort of perspective drops out of the discussion.f we're each alone in little isolated bubbles between our ears, there's no way to tell if we really communicate or if we just believe we're doing that. — frank
How do you get things without facts, or facts without things? — Banno
Language is constructed socially, and minds are as much a part of that construction as words. — Banno
f we're each alone in little isolated bubbles between our ears, there's no way to tell if we really communicate or if we just believe we're doing that.
— frank
...and so that sort of perspective drops out of the discussion. — Banno
I've in mind the difference between Wittgenstein's and Russell's versions of logical atomism, the indirect topic of ↪plaque flag's recent thread. Is the world all the things, or all the facts? — Banno
With a different metaphysics, like we're all connected to a universal mind of some kind, then communication would be easy to explain. — frank
To me this is a tempting but wrong approach. Our mentalistic folk psychology, very useful in ordinary life, gets adopted without criticism in a more serious metaphysical context. So we get dualism and the container metaphor for communication. — plaque flag
It's a tricky issue ! My approach is to reject the idea that meaning is a kind of immaterial stuff in the head. An idea is an equivalence class of [ material / physical ] expressions understood as tools. To translate a French sentence into an English sentence is to find a sentence in English that serves roughly the same purpose, does the same job. We focus on similarity of function. We think of ourselves as very clever primates with extremely complicated norms for using marks and noises. Note that 'demoting' ideas 'into' the physical also lifts up the physical. 'Geist' is a staggering complex 'dance' in/of material. But for me there's no final word on what materiality 'really' is. [ Mostly I just avoid supernatural pseudoexplanations and that's 'materialism' enough. ] Quarks and divorces and scientific norms are on the same plane inferentially --- we decide how to use such concepts.Right. Physicalism or materialism leaves us with that problem: how do meanings travel between heads? Physicalism is part of our present worldview, so that's why we're faced with the issue. — frank
Many would like to point to social interaction as the basis for communication (meaning is use). But where behaviorism is rejected, this view doesn't really seem to do the job it's intended to do. — frank
Another approach would be to start, tentatively, with what we can't do without. — frank
That's part of what I'm doing in Nothing Is Hidden. But something like public concepts seems to be necessary, because we can't start doing philosophy unless we understand one another to some degree --- and have a world together that we can be more or less right about. — plaque flag
Now I do not think that you do hold to such a view; and so I am at a loss as to what it is you are supposing we are doing in philosophy. — Banno
A charitable interpretation of T Clark’s position is that he is not saying, for example, that in a discussion entitled “What is truth?” we have to agree on what truth is at the start to make any progress—that obviously couldn’t work—but that in a discussion about something else, some other concept, one that depends on the concept of truth, a way of directing the debate is to decide on the definitions of those dependencies, otherwise the wrangling over definitions never ends. — Jamal
In my opinion, it’s a task in life to train oneself to speak as clearly as possible. This isn’t achieved by paying special attention to words, but by clearly formulating theses, so formulated as to be criticizable. People who speak too much about words or concepts or definitions don’t actually bring anything forward that makes a claim to truth. So you can’t do anything against it. A definition is a pure conventional matter.
They only lead to a pretentious, false precision, to the impression that one is particularly precise. But it’s a sham precision, it isn’t genuine clarity. For that reason, I’m against the discussion of terms and definitions. I’m rather for plain, clear speaking. — Karl Popper
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