I think that simply is how it is generally used, and yes, we ought to use it that way too.
— unenlightened
Why ought we? — StreetlightX
To which a perfectly intelligible reply would be, "The university relocated to Inverness during the war, and never came back", or even, "the university is on vacation at the moment." — unenlightened
It's not enough simply to declare that I am wrong, you need to present some argument or explanation. — unenlightened
Oh, to maximise agreement, principle of charity, because meaning is use. What a fucking idiotic question. — unenlightened
think it is reasonable to limit 'construct' to the productions of life-forms. Thus a mountain is a formation, but an ant-hill is a construct. I can then use the same notion of life-forms to make the further distinction between a construct made of formations the ant-hill again, and a construct made of life forms, an ant colony.
constructions and constructs, by the English definition, are not limited to the productions of life forms. — Thanatos Sand
construct
verb
kənˈstrʌkt/Submit
1.
build or make (something, typically a building, road, or machine).
"a company that constructs oil rigs"
synonyms: build, erect, put up, set up, raise, establish, assemble, manufacture, fabricate, form, fashion, contrive, create, make
"the government has plans to construct a hydroelectric dam there"
noun
noun: construct; plural noun: constructs
ˈkɒnstrʌkt/Submit
1.
an idea or theory containing various conceptual elements, typically one considered to be subjective and not based on empirical evidence.
"history is largely an ideological construct" — google
In spite of collective belief that blacks are equal to whites in America, blacks are -- by the stats -- treated worse than whites.
One could take this as evidence that people really believe that blacks are inferior. I'd just say that in spite of widespread intentional beliefs of racial equality, we continue to see white supremacy operate in the world. Not unanimous widespread belief, mind, but widespread.
Also, on the back-end of the civil rights movement, in spite of widespread belief that blacks were inferior, a minority political movement was able to enact and enforce (to a limited extent) laws that bettered their position.
Belief is only a small part of the overall social world, and is often times not even relevant to its functioning and operations. — Moliere
construct
verb
kənˈstrʌkt/Submit
1.
build or make (something, typically a building, road, or machine).
"a company that constructs oil rigs"
synonyms: build, erect, put up, set up, raise, establish, assemble, manufacture, fabricate, form, fashion, contrive, create, make
"the government has plans to construct a hydroelectric dam there"
noun
noun: construct; plural noun: constructs
ˈkɒnstrʌkt/Submit
1.
an idea or theory containing various conceptual elements, typically one considered to be subjective and not based on empirical evidence.
"history is largely an ideological construct"
I'm not seeing any reference to sedimentary rocks or anything else produced by other than lifeforms.Where do you get your definition?
From the point of view of individuation, it is not at all clear that one can make an in-principle distinction between the kinds of processes involved in either the construction of mountains or molehills. For someone like Manuel Delanda, for example, the processes at work in the formation of both mountains and societies, are, at a certain level of abstraction, exactly the same: "Sedimentary rocks, species and social classes (and other institutionalized hierarchies) are all historical constructions, the product of definite structure-generating processes" ... which Delanda describes, but I'll omit for reasons of space. In any case, the conclusion being that "this conception of very specific abstract machines governing a variety of structure-generating processes not only blurs the distinction between the natural and the artificial, but also that between the living and the inert." — StreetlightX
For instance, one answer to "Where is the University?" might be, "Oh, the government abolished education years ago. The buildings remain, and are used for other purposes, but this is no longer a University." And that goes back to pumpkin patches and sewing machines, etc. The "organization" Ryle refers to is social, in at least one sense. You can tear down either one without destroying the other.The University is just the way in which all that he has already seen is organized. When they are seen and when their co-ordination is understood, the University has been seen.
One can, of course, make all sorts of distinctions for all kinds of purposes: — StreetlightX
To posit a distinction between 'construction' and 'formation' indexed upon a further distinction between life and not-life (or 'forms of life' and 'not-forms-of-life') is to imply both that the constructions of life differ in kind from the formations of non-life and that both life and non-life irreducibly differ along the dimension of their respective 'productions'. It's a case of 'baking in' conceptual differences right at the level of terminology, and it irrevocably alters the way which we treat these concepts*. There is nothing innocent, in other words, about the way we articulate the relations between our concepts; those initial articulations foreclose certain ways of thinking about things, even as they open up other paths. — StreetlightX
*Spencer-Brown: "There can be no distinction without motive, and there can be no motive unless contents are seen to differ in value." — StreetlightX
*Spencer-Brown: "There can be no distinction without motive, and there can be no motive unless contents are seen to differ in value." — StreetlightX
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds new discoveries, is not 'Eureka!' (I found it!) but 'That's funny ...' — Asimov
what does it mean to say a distinction is "purpose-relative"? How does that work? — Srap Tasmaner
So going to the OP, semiotics would take it as obvious that our relations with the world are constructed. That is the definition of life and mind - to be a modelling relation where information forms a self in fruitful control of a physical world. — apokrisis
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.