And what makes it appropriate to use a sentence such as "it is raining" on certain circumstances and not some others, is not decided solely by what one intends. So I think that intention by itself is not a plausible explanation of linguistic meaning. — Fafner
But still, I don't think that shifting the burden to communal conventions can tell you the whole story of how sentences can mean what they mean. What kind of facts make it the case that a given community uses certain words to mean X rather than Y? — Fafner
Unique, unconventional language use happens, but for the most part, language games utilize convention.Mm, the 'use' in 'meaning-as-use' has never referred to 'conventional use' but 'use in a language game' — StreetlightX
Secondly, the concept of language-games points at the rule-governed character of language. This does not entail strict and definite systems of rules for each and every language-game, but points to the conventional nature of this sort of human activity. — SEP Wittgenstein
Sure. But the challenge is not make it sound too anti-realistic or conventionalist. We want our sentences to have objective truth conditions at the end, don't we?At any rate, yes, the next step is to look at the occasion of utterance, the context of the utterance, and so on. Do we agree on that? — Srap Tasmaner
But the challenge is not make it sound too anti-realistic or conventionalist. We want our sentences to have objective truth conditions at the end, don't we? — Fafner
Unique, unconventional language use happens, but for the most part, language games utilize convention. — Mongrel
Sure, but it is vitally important that the notion of use in a language game is made categorically distinct from 'conventional use'. To conflate the two is render Wittgenstein unintelligible. — StreetlightX
If you mean he wasn't talking about any particular set of conventions, — Mongrel
What grounds meaning in his (quite agreeable view) is not convention (which is easy to think), but "forms of life" far more generally, like what is universal to the human condition, and meaning is only transferable, or made up of not only grammar, but subjective judgment which have to match, which come from living, and experience. So that, language is as universal as the form of life in which the meaning arises from. This is why a lion wielding all of the bestest grammar, would still be unintelligible. — Wosret
What grounds meaning in his (quite agreeable view) is not convention (which is easy to think), but "forms of life" far more generally, like what is universal to the human condition — Wosret
Convention is just like agreement in like a contractual, abstract sense, like the spelling of a word, which leaves the the individual lived experience that the meaning that fills up those conventional containers come from out of it... Its like the thing I'm always going on about. — Wosret
I don't think of conventional usages of language as "contractual" at all. I believe that linguistic usages become established in a 'live' way; that is, in, and in accordance with, lived experience. — John
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