Even if we make mistakes, it's still clear what trying to split this stuff up would mean in terms of a language. I doubt you can say the same form Baggs' stimming. — fdrake
To what extent is an immediate relationship with our non-human surroundings a language? — Joshs
relationship entails communication, so it is a language. — Pop
;) I dare you to find the different particles in the word. And before you think of it: the ' symbol in the text is a normal letter in the Hebrew alphabet (Jod). You can find this and more examples on page 160 of the grammar I linked before. — KrisGl
And it's plain to me this is thinking behavior we're talking about. When I gaze up at the night sky, I'm surely engaging with what I see thinkingly, but it's not always accompanied by thoughts in words, or even by specific feelings. Sometimes there's a definite "sense of wonder," but sometimes I just look and it doesn't have to be anything else, but it's still a sort of thinking. — Srap Tasmaner
I would call this "language" it is just not as prominent and familiar to many because we are told what "language" is and what "grammar" is. I can absolutely think without words and form ideas and images in my head that play out without any need for worded thought. — I like sushi
People can communicate extremely complex ideas in other forms than worded language. — I like sushi
The whole thread is just littered with equivocation between the literal and metaphorical meanings of "language". — Baden
If you spend a lot of time thinking about poetry, in particular, it's hard not to think of language as this quasi-magical means of reaching out to the world, to things themselves, as the man says. The social-use-first view feels a bit deflationary by comparison. — Srap Tasmaner
you can't make people follow standard word usages — Baden
I like what Baggs does and I find it interesting from an artistic perspective. But I wanted to clarify it's not language. — Baden
You really don't need fluency, or even much understanding. to detect the presence of units of meaning. — fdrake
"Салам, куыдтæ дæ?"
What are the distinct symbol groups in that? Clearly, "Салам", "куыдтæ" and "дæ". It has a question mark at the end, so presumably it is a question. — fdrake
What is the difference between language and communication, if any? — KrisGl
It's the same type of mistake that would claim body language is language by the way. It's not. It's just communication. — Baden
Suppose, I am in an interview and I fold my arms to communicate my nervousness. That is an expression that communicates something, "discomfort", which is publicly interpretable and which is often described as "body language". But it is not language. Folding one's arms could conceivably be linguistic as part of a system of sign language, but in that case it could mean anything. — Baden
Same question. Why not just say not all communication is linguistic? — Srap Tasmaner
Are you interested in how our language-using community of philosophers defines these two concepts (conceptual approach)? Are you asking what sorts of things fall under the heading of 'language' and 'communication,' with an eye toward refining the concepts accordingly (descriptive approach)? Are you asking why we need to have these two concepts in the first place, and perhaps proposing a useful discrimination between them in order to achieve our goals (ameliorative approach)? Or are you interested in knowing how the two terms have evolved within a matrix of social practices here in the U.S. (or the West, or whatever social group seems relevant) (genealogical approach)? — J
For instance, semiotics has been brought up here. But on the wider Augustinian/Peircrean view of semiotics, all sorts of things are semiotic, so that isn't all that informative on as to language. — Count Timothy von Icarus
If someone thinks in pictures is their thought process therefore non-linguistic? — Leontiskos
I mean, it depends, right? — Srap Tasmaner
specifically — Leontiskos
Is that the kind of answer you were looking for? — Srap Tasmaner
Whether the picture is being used as a picture or a sign. — Srap Tasmaner
Further reply with example.
Sometimes maps for children will have little pictures. At Paris, a little Eiffel Tower; at South Dakota, a little Mount Rushmore. Here the picture is a straightforward representation of a thing, but used by a sort of metonymy to mean the whole place where that thing is. So in such a case, both. — Srap Tasmaner
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