I think people will be utterly confounded if we start trying to say that the word "dog" doesn't have anything that could be called a meaning the moment the last user of the word dies. That just seems like nonsense to me, so I'm immediately curious as to what advantage people think that way of talking has. — Isaac
If no one understands it then the meaning is lost. What is your point? This is obvious? — I like sushi
True, but as far as the most prevalent (nearly universal) and most important moral preferences are concerned, we're all so similarly positioned that in practice it doesn't really matter that we're basing morality on human preference (its human morality after-all); most of our moral dilemmas and efforts in moral suasion concerns how to socially accommodate our existing values, not how to force our own preferences on others. There need not be moral conflict on the grounds of different preferences unless they are somehow mutually exclusive.
Furthermore, merely acting on personal preference lacks such a significant component of how most people conceptualize "morality" that it is basically antithetical. Under most definitions, morality only begins when we consider the preferences of others, whether for greedy, strategic, or empathetic causes. Impulsively acting on our hedonic urges (as "mere preference" might be boiled down to) seems antithetical to what it is we do when we do morality.
For most people, morality isn't fundamentally "personal preference", it's "personal preference in world of others' preferences, which pragmatically demands consideration" — VagabondSpectre
To a large degree it depends on how we define "morality". If human preference is the locus of a given definition, it's wielders will go around equating morality with preference. But if, for example, "serving human preference" is instead the locus, then it's wielders might go around equating morality with objective strategy.
Both views can be simultaneously true, and even complimentary, with a bit of effort. Human preferences (especially shared preferences) (eg: the desire to be free and unmolested), can form the basis of our moral objectives, agreements, and actions, but at the same time empirical truth must also play a part in our determinations of what to do next. According to human preferences, some moral schemes are objectively inferior to others because they might not effectively serve those preferences. — VagabondSpectre
This from another thread:
"Morality isn't anything other than how people feel, whether they approve or disapprove, etc. of interpersonal behavior that they consider more significant than etiquette."
I do not agree with the thought expressed, but I've shot my bolt at the writer and he is unaffected. I suppose first question is, is he alone or does he have company? — tim wood
Second question, in as much as I've failed to educate the writer, can anyone do a better job? — tim wood
My view is that morality is evolved thought, and in that sense is a something and not a nothing, certainly more than an individual's mere opinion. — tim wood
I'd even argue that to some degree morality is sure as arithmetic, but the world from time to time and here and there lapses into such barbarous immorality that either humanity is at times collectively both stupid and ignorant, or morality ultimately lacks apodeictic certainty (but that has some other kind of certainty). — tim wood
Belief is what you choose to hold to be true without requiring objective evidence. — Txastopher
I have no idea what you're referring to here, so I suppose I have no option at the moment aside from "ignoring" it. — Terrapin Station
I'd have no idea what "it's the case" is supposed to refer to if it's not a synonym for facts a la either states of affairs or the colloquial "true proposition" sense.
But okay, I guess just assume that I must know. — Terrapin Station
How would I help you help me? I haven't the faintest idea how you're using the term "fact" based on what you've said you don't have in mind with it. — Terrapin Station
The question of what this thread is about has been foremost in my mind from the beginning. I still haven't figured it out. It may be there is no figuring it out. It may all be a dance of the defensive. I think I stepped into an ongoing argument and will step out. — Fooloso4
Nevertheless, I have no idea what you'd be referring to by the term, exactly. Do you want me to just pretend that I do because you don't want to try to explain it some other way? — Terrapin Station
First, I don't even have any idea what you're referring to with "fact," because per your claims, you're neither using it in the state of affairs sense nor in the colloquial "true proposition" sense.
Facts aren't about anything except if one is sloppily using the term to be a synonym for "true proposition." — Terrapin Station
Calm down, dear.
— S
Too late, you missed the bonus.
You were given an opportunity to play your favorite role, Grammar Nazi, and you missed it. You must be getting old or maybe you just spend too much time not proof reading. — Sir2u
You ignored it. You offer gratuitous assertions. — creativesoul
However, all you've done is fallen prey to confirmation bias. — creativesoul
Reading a text and looking at marks.
The difference?
Understanding the meaning. — creativesoul
The last point is the problem. It depends on the meaning of 'use'. I use it in the same sense that Wittgenstein does - use in practice. Reading a text is not practicing a language. A dead language is by definition no longer practiced. — Fooloso4
The fact that you are alive is the fact that your body is undergoing metabolism, cell division, etc. — Terrapin Station
How could you think that being alive is not a process, for example? — Terrapin Station
Are you alive if you're not experiencing metabolism? Cell division?
How could you think that you're not a system and part of other systems? Are you alive sans a circulatory system? — Terrapin Station
Sigh. Thanks for repeating this, I had overlooked it the first 500 times you said it. — Echarmion
It wasn't intended as an argument. It was intended as a thought exercise to try to bridge the apparent failure to communicate. To perhaps bring out the hidden premises, as you call it. Oh well. — Echarmion
It certainly would not harm you to try. :smirk: — Sir2u
Some of us do try, unfortunately some others that consider themselves more as Oracles than participants try to force us into believing that their way is always right and that they are never wrong. — Sir2u
We've been over this already. I gave argument. You ignored it. You offer gratuitous assertions.
Reading presupposes understanding the meaning of a text. One cannot possibly understand the meaning of a text without using it. One cannot possibly read a text without already understanding the language it is written in.
All readers of a text are users of it's language. — creativesoul
And yet they're still meaningful. And that's the problem with interpreting "meaning is use" in this awful idealist way.
— S
Wittgenstein is often implicated but is not guilty by association. — Fooloso4
But, like you go on to suggest, you can take away the "for us" and there's still a meaning.
— S
I think creativesoul agrees with this but thinks it requires an argument to demonstrate its truth. But then again, although I am a "user" of English, whatever it is he thinks he has so clearly stated evades me. — Fooloso4
You guessed. You asked about the guess. I answered. — creativesoul
Who writes in hieroglyphs? Who writes or speaks in Demotic or any form of ancient Greek? There are a few people who know how to read these languages but no one "uses" them. They are dead languages. Their use is ancient history. Unlike living languages the meaning of the terms are fixed by how they were used when they were used. — Fooloso4
They are for us meaningless. — Fooloso4
If someone were able to decipher the texts, however, then some sense of their meaning would be understood, unless they never had a meaning to begin with. — Fooloso4
Probably not at this stage, to be honest. — Isaac
And you'd be absolutely right to ask, but it's a very big topic and each fork splits a thread like this in half making it very difficult to follow. I'm happy for now just to put the idea out there and relate it the problems of this topic. If people don't find it immediately appealing without a conclusive argument that's fine, a thread on each aspect is probably most appropriate. — Isaac
Apologies, I will try to be clearer. You seem happy to say that meaning 'really is' a property of the word, blue 'really is' a property of the cup, but 'having a tendency, among humans wishing to drive nails, to be used to drive nails' cannot be a property of the hammer. I've not read yet anything I understood as a description of the factor(s) your using to make these categorisations other than that they seem obvious. — Isaac
But I don't know how it makes sense to say of anything that it's not part of a system that it's not a process. — Terrapin Station
Right. In colloquial speech, "fact" is often used as a synonym for "true proposition" (although "proposition" in colloquial speech isn't nearly as well-defined as it is in analytic philosophy, and almost no one would define in as analytic philosophers do). Analytic philosophers, and by extension the sciences, etc., do not use "fact" that way. And there are reasons for this, due to analysis, the utility of making certain distinctions, etc. — Terrapin Station
If you're not using them the same, but facts are somehow about something in your view, however you're using the term would be a mystery to me, Maybe it's stemming from unfamiliarity with the analytic phil sense of proposition, though. — Terrapin Station
Which is a fact on the analytic phil and standard scientific usage. — Terrapin Station
The only thing I can offer you at this point is a bit of armchair psychology, namely that I think your problem is that you are imagining a scenario without humans, but when you are then trying to look at that which remains, you are looking at it from a human view (in this case, literally imagining a yellow sign with text on it).
As an exercise, let's imagine the only humans left are blind, and have been for generations. How would you explain to them what a yellow sign with text on it even is? — Echarmion
And how can we possibly judge how to "best see" meaning if no true statements can be made about what meaning is?
— Echarmion
By which works best to achieve our goals. — Isaac
Yes, and I've asked you several times now for an explanation of how we judge which arguments are true, if not by empirical methods. — Isaac
Obviously, I think that these arguments represent "knowing when we've got there".
— Echarmion
Yes, but others don't, so now what? — Isaac
You'll have to spell out the connection there as I'm not seeing it. As far as I'm concerned, I've just said that it is unproblematic to refer to the use an object is generally put to as a property of that object, wheras Heidegger made up a load of shit about 'being' and then tried to claim German was the best language because he was a Nazi. Not seeing the similarity. — Isaac
But this is exactly what your opposition here are doing with words and meaning.
I don't get why you're turning this molehill into a mountain. It has properties which could make it a {meaningful word}, like almost {any other pattern of marks}. But the properties of the object and what the object could {mean to a language user} are two distinct things. I prefer to be clear and logical, so I reject a conflation of the two. — Isaac
I'm trying to argue that the meaning of a word is a property of the word, by showing how the reaction of other objects is essential to the definition of loads of properties which we routinely call properties of the object. I'm thus saying that the fact that words require humans to interpret need not prevent us from treating their meaning as a property. — Isaac
It seems to me that your argument is that for some properties, the fact that they require some interaction to manifest them is trivial, for others it is non-trivial but irrelevant to possession of a property and for a third group it is very relevant and effectively prohibits us from treating the property as a property of the object in question. Your basis for this seems to be "that's just the way thing are... obviously!". — Isaac
