We're approaching a point of difference, perhaps, in that for me, there is a place, if not for certainty, then at the least for confidence in our understanding, a foundation found in the very actuality of these considerations. We are not utterly adrift. I'm not sure you will agree. — Banno
I don't think it's a dismissal of Austin to fail to see anything of metaphysical import — frank
It seems perhaps Malcolm is creating his own opponent, but I don’t think it is Austin. — Antony Nickles
I believe Austin may be thinking that we know the concept of dreaming from 'one's own case'. — Richard B
I did try to explain here and here why Austin and Wittgenstein do not overtly argue for a certain case. — Antony Nickles
One point, however, is that we all want to get at the truth, find (explicate) something illuminating about ourselves and the world. — Antony Nickles
Good question. I've read various things that he wrote, but not this specific text. Now I know where to get hold of it. I will certainly read it - and I expect to change my views somewhat.Has anybody here actually read any Ayers? — frank
How would you characterize his metaphysics? — frank
This post might seem cruel, but you were insistent. It very much seems that although you are commendably struggling with this material, you haven't yet seen how it undermines much that you take as granted. — Banno
There's a copy of Ayer's Foundations at https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.46395/ . — Banno
All these activities you listed are just part of the communication, description, expression and criticisms ... so on and so forth. You just listed these items to fill in the space. I could have done that, but what is the point? Everyone knows that they are part of the communication and interaction.He might then point out that we don't only "express", we also hide, conceal and camouflage; we don't only "describe", we misdescribe, mislead, misdirect; we don't only "communicate", we deceive, mislead and beguile. Where we do one thing with words, we also do the opposite. — Banno
Misunderstanding and getting mixed up is evident here. "what language does from that."? Language doesn't do anything. It is a tool. Humans do things. Language just gets used to communicate and interact their thoughts, feelings and intentions.A first step might best be to look at the variety of ways in which we do things with words and build a picture of what language does from that. Look, first. — Banno
You deny and criticise giving Prima Facie on perception leaning on Austin's shoulder, as if perception doesn't count. But here you seem to be acknowledging that you must perceive first before you can speak. Wouldn't it be a case of self-contradiction?Look, first. — Banno
First of all, I think you should learn to think and speak for yourself, not hiding behind Austin or whoever when expressing your points in Philosophy. But more importantly, I think you seem to be wrong again on that point. What is the point trying to create a well with just Austin's linguistic analysis on Ayer? Wouldn't the water in the well go stale soon with the prejudice and narrow mindedness rejecting all the relating issues, analysis and criticisms?And if Austin were writing this, there would be a thread running through the text that shows how the very approach you have taken presumes wrongly that a complete answer can be given, an account of language in its entirety, as if the whole of language dwelt within itself. — Banno
Here, one cannot fail to notice the impression that the whole motivation seems to prove the opposing interlocutors views are either confused or wrong, rather than trying to see the issue from a fair, reasonable and constructive point of view.So there, against my better judgement, is a beginning of what might be said about just your first point. As Anthony says, the whole picture and every word in it is either confused or wrong. — Banno
See your imaginative conjectures? Who are "we"? Do we always change the world? With language? Can you change the tree on the road with your words? — Corvus
Here, one cannot fail to notice the impression that the whole motivation seems to prove the opposing interlocutors views are either confused or wrong, rather than trying to see the issue from a fair, reasonable and constructive point of view. — Corvus
But you can't ask if everything you see is real. — Ludwig V
If you define the problem as the connection between words and the world, you have built that answer in to the question. — Ludwig V
Therefore you cannot change the world or objects in the world with your words. — Corvus
But that was the impression being created and propagated by his blinded followers. — Corvus
There is connection between words and mental events and activities. — Corvus
If you're contemplating the possibility that you're in the Matrix, you can. — frank
Can you re-assure me that nothing disastrous will happen if I follow the link anyway? — Ludwig V
.. and mental events are not part of the world? — Ludwig V
There is no logical ground for me to believe the world exists during my sleep, because I no longer perceive the world until waking up to consciousness. — Corvus
It is not something a priori problem. — Corvus
I don't say that there are no cases where things cease to exist when I no longer perceive them. But I do say that there are some things that continue to exist when I no longer perceive them. On your account, you have decided that "exists" and "perceive" mean the same thing. I accept what I understand to be normal usage. We use the words in different ways. Why does it matter? — Ludwig V
The doubt or question 'But is it a real one?' has always (must have) a special basis, there must be some 'reason for suggesting' that it isn't real, in the sense of some specific way, or limited number of specific ways, in which it is suggested that this experience or item may be phoney. Sometimes (usually) the context makes it clear what the suggestion is... If the context doesn't make it clear, [only] then I am entitled to ask 'How do you mean? .... — Austin, Other Minds, p.87 (emphasis in bold added) this is a link to the text
...if Ayer were right here, then absolutely every dispute would be purely verbal. For if, when one person says whatever it may be, another person may simply 'prefer to say' something else, they will always be arguing only about words, about what terminology is to be preferred. How could anything be a question of truth or falsehood, if anyone can always say whatever he likes? — Austin p. 60
If the context doesn't make it clear, [only] then I am entitled to ask 'How do you mean? . — Austin, Other Minds, p.87 (emphasis in bold added)
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