Only that, if we want to employ it in order to illuminate 'constructions' - in that very narrow context - then we should specify how it does. — StreetlightX
It's sufficient to answer that with "That's how the word is commonly used." — Mongrel
If you want to stipulate a special definition, you can invite people to accept it. You'd probably want to build an attractive (or at least intriguing) thesis around that jargon. So it would start something like: "I posit that mountains are constructions." You wait for the audience to register their surprise and then you go to about explaining how that could be. — Mongrel
There are few things more entirely worthless than relying on 'how words are commonly used' in order to aim at conceptual specificity. — StreetlightX
That 'construction' is commonly used in relation to, well, what is it? - life, humans, or intention? - tells us nothing about construction and everything about the socio-linguistic quirks of a particular community in a particular period of time. And in this case not even a community - so far two people have used three different distinctions in this thread alone. — StreetlightX
The only possible response that a Descartes might have to the objection that he's using the word 'cogito' in a way not commonly mandated would be 'who gives a flying fuck?'. — StreetlightX
Yep, that's how all discussions take place. With explanation. 'Common meaning' is merely petrified jargon. — StreetlightX
It's incredible that one has to justify the ground zero of rational discussion - the giving and asking for reasons - with these ridiculous convolutions. — StreetlightX
You're getting really absolutist about this. You're seeing construction as an unchanging entity. — Mongrel
Then your role would be to simply discern the intention of the speaker. You wouldn't be asking for justification of use.That there is no absolute, unchanging manner in which 'construction' ought to be understood is the exact reason that it cannot do to appeal to 'common meaning' - or indeed, any meaning that is not explicitly articulated according to the terms specific to it's employment. — StreetlightX
Then your role would be to simply discern the intention of the speaker. You wouldn't be asking for justification of use. — Mongrel
Explain. — StreetlightX
So Un says construction is about things that are actively built as opposed to things that just sort of passively appeared due to erosion or continental collision. — Mongrel
I was asking if society is constructed or discovered.
I think your position is that everything is constructed, except some things are mathematically inevitable.. so not constructed. Is your view contradictory? — Mongrel
This viewpoint sees people as active in shaping their world, rather than as entities who are acted upon by society (Herman and Reynolds, 1994). With symbolic interactionism, reality is seen as social, developed interaction with others.
Most symbolic interactionists believe a physical reality does indeed exist by an individual's social definitions, and that social definitions do develop in part or relation to something "real". People thus do not respond to this reality directly, but rather to the social understanding of reality; i.e., they respond to this reality indirectly through a kind of filter which consists of individuals' different perspectives.
This means that humans exist not in the physical space composed of realities, but in the "world" composed only of "objects". According to Blumer, the "objects" can be divided into three types: physical objects, social objects, and abstract objects.
Both individuals and society cannot be separated far from each other for two reasons. One, being that they are both created through social interaction, and two, one cannot be understood without the other. Behavior is not defined by forces from the environment or inner forces such as drives, or instincts, but rather by a reflective, socially understood meaning of both the internal and external incentives that are currently presented.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbolic_interactionism
Now with words, something almost all of us do is the "in a sense" move. So you could say that "in a sense" rivers "construct" riverbeds, where "in a sense" might as well mean "metaphorically." Or it indicates there is a useful analogy here. But you could also say that "literally" rivers construct riverbeds, and that requires adjusting the received meaning of "construct."
In one sense, that just amounts to skipping a step -- metaphors are just not-yet-literal usages, not yet entrenched, and some metaphors never receive wide enough usage or acceptance to become entrenched as literal. On the other hand, a metaphor that is used widely enough to become literal doesn't usually displace existing usage; it gets added on. Displacing existing usage carries a heavier burden. — Srap Tasmaner
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