But the most important word in here is "consistent." What you teach someone when you teach them a language, the practice you invite them to join, is precisely the consistent and regular actions (not only the utterances, but the matching of utterance to occasion, and so on) that constitute its use, in short, its conventions. No regularity, no convention, and no language. — Srap Tasmaner
But I have been quite clear, in almost every one of my posts, that by convention I mean already-established use (of language), and not grammatical regularity. If you want to call grammatical regularity 'convention', then so be it, but then we are not talking about the same thing, and there is no disagreement.
This is a tough sell because it's extremely difficult to imagine the "no other terms" part. I think we all reach in our minds for some foundational gestures we pretend are transparent and self-grounding. — Srap Tasmaner
I actually agree with this for the most part. My 'no other terms' qualifier is meant to apply to spoken or written language. I would however, modify your comment here to say not that we 'reach in our minds', but that we 'reach in our bodies', as it were. While it's not something I've mentioned yet for parsimony's sake, I'm a strong believer in the thesis that our elementary experiences of meaning are
bodily. That is, what we 'share' to begin with our quite simply our physiognomies: we are (to a large extent) laterally symmetric, forward oriented, motile, and gravity bound beings with limbs for grasping and a swivelling neck, and the way in which our physiognomies interact with the
affordances of our environment provides us with our 'initial', shared coordinates of meaning. It is the environmental relations we establish by means of our interactions with it that provide the germinal 'fund' of meaning out of which further meaning grows*. There's lots more to say on this, but I'll keep it short.
As far the this thread is concerned, again, one can call this shared physiographical ground a 'convention', but this would be a lexical stretch, and again, is not, and has never been, what I am arguing against.
*As argued by those like Lakoff and Johnson, David Olsen, David McNeill, Maxine Sheets-Johnston, and others (and anticipated, in fact, by Witty's famous line about a lion that could speak being totally unintelligible to us).
But by claiming ... that a few strings and gestures and their translated meanings is all it takes to have a language — Srap Tasmaner
Perhaps you could point out where, exactly, I make this claim. A direct quote would be nice. I did provide a couple of examples of "a 'new usage' that bears absolutely no association or link whatsoever to the conventional usages of the time in which it arose" (John's request) - which is what I was asked for, but if you think I meant these examples as 'all that it takes to have a language' then I'm afraid you're reading things that aren't there.