When I said that we can use words to not refer to anything, I meant like this: "shoes make donkeys beat black" Does that make any sense to you? Is that meaningful? If simply using words creates meaning, then that string of words would mean something, but it doesn't - not even to myself the user of the words! It's simply a string of gibberish. You may even ask, "what do you mean?" You may even attempt to imbue meaning into the phrase by trying to get at what the words are referring to. Maybe the donkeys and black are two different soccer teams and the donkeys' shoes are better than the blacks, which is why the blacks get beat. In other words, meaning didn't come from my use of words, they come from you establishing a reference between the words and some real event or thing in the world.I don't see how this addresses my question. You said that we can use words but not refer to anything. So how can one use the words "the cat is on the mat" and not refer to anything, and how does this differ from using the words "the cat is on the mat" and referring to something? — Michael
How is that NOT referring to anything? Are you not saying that there is an actual cat ON an actual mat? Is not your visual of a cat on a mat a visual of a cat on a mat, not a visual of scribbles on a screen and that is what the words on the screen refer to? That is the visual I got when reading your words. Your words were simply a temporary replacement for the visual of a cat on a mat in order for you to communicate that there was a cat on the mat. If I were there looking at the cat on the mat with you and you say that, wouldn't it be redundant? It is redundant because communicating is simply sharing information about some state-of-affairs, and if I already see the cat on the mat, saying so would just be a waste of breath.I don't understand what you mean by this. Perhaps you could explain the difference between saying to me "the cat is on the mat" and not referring to anything and saying "the cat is on the mat" and referring to something. — Michael
I have already stated that "meaning" is the causal relationship between causes and their effects. Minds, which are just sensory information processing systems, are able to establish associations with different experiences. Hearing a voice speak is no different than hearing the waves of the ocean. It's all just noise until you establish some link, or association, with some cause of hearing some thing. Once I hear and see the waves crash, or a person speak, then I'm able to establish to a connection between the sounds and what I see.It doesn't really solve the philosophical problem of meaning to say that there are some 'ideas' in your mind. The fact that something is in your mind as opposed to behavior doesn't magically solve everything. It doesn't explain meaning (or rather, it doesn't tell you what meaning is), because if there is a puzzle about how mere words can represent something, there's equally a puzzle about how 'ideas' in someone's head can do the same thing. Thinking that the mind has some magical ability to simply 'mean' things is an illusion.
I already quoted some passages from Wittgenstein where he gives an argument (especially the sections about the cube picture) against views like yours, but you however completely ignored that argument. — Fafner
Ridiculous. If meaning is use, then how words come to mean anything is how they are employed. People change the usage of words, therefore their meaning, and that word now has come to mean something else (like slang) and then used by others in that way.Again, this is irrelevant to a thesis about how words come to mean. How words come to mean, and how those meanings are employed, are two entirely different issues. — StreetlightX
There is more to a banana that just it's color. It also has a shape that isn't the shape of a ball. It also has a particular texture. It's shape, texture and color is what defines it as a banana. We have different senses that allow us to make these distinctions between yellow balls and yellow bananas.But this doesn't make the color yellow itself into a symbol for ripeness. Suppose a monkey comes to expect a banana whenever it sees a yellow object. Would we say that when the monkey sees a yellow ball that it comes to believe that the ball is ripe? Or does it believe falsely that the ball is ripe banana? From the example alone it is simply not clear what is supposed to represent what. — Fafner
But why would I do that? My point is that words are only for communicating with others. Why would I need to communicate an idea that isn't composed of words with words to myself? I would simply think it without any use of words.Sure, you could stop yourself, but if you wanted to use words in some idiosyncratic way that only you understand, you could do that, too. — Terrapin Station
I would be stopping myself because when I communicate, it is my intention that others understand me. If I just used any scribble to meaning anything then I wouldn't be communicating.And indeed you can do that. Who would be stopping you? — Terrapin Station
The reason people use words is to communicate. How they use the words is what they communicate. You have an idea you want to communicate and if you don't use the words just right, then you end up not communicating at all.I don't see the relevance of the question. The reason people use words has nothing to do with how words come to mean. — StreetlightX
If the reason people use words has nothing to do with how the words come to mean, then meaning isn't use.I don't see the relevance of the question. The reason people use words has nothing to do with how words come to mean. — StreetlightX
But there aren't an infinite number of definitions. There are a limited amount. Again, if meaning is use, then I can use any word, or any scribble for that matter, to mean anything I want. Dictionaries become irrelevant. By arguing that dictionaries define specific ways of using words, is to say that words have specific meanings and can only be used in these particular ways and not in others.This is exactly wrong though. Dictionaries just are catalogues of word use. This is why dictionaries constantly introduce new words, and indeed, offer multiple definitions of words in some cases (not to mention drop words in some cases). They track how words are used. 'Definitions' in dictionaries track word use, not the other way around. — StreetlightX
Then how does one get to know and therefore use their first word if we need other words to tell us what another word means?What dictionaries do is to replace words which the speaker doesn't know their conventional use, with words that the speaker does know how to use, because if he didn't then the dictionary would be completely useless to him. — Fafner
I don't know if he did, but that's irrelevant, because he was only talking about the meaning of words. As as I said before, you're creating a straw-man by equivocating on the word "meaning". — Michael
In my first response to you I already said that something can be a symbol without being a word, and I also said that meaning is not just "associating" words with things, so I didn't say that a verbal language is necessary for symbolizing. — Fafner
Exactly. That is why I mentioned that you need experience in eating yellow and black bananas.But you can also see the banana as yellow without knowing that it is ripe (or even knowing that it is something edible). So just seeing the banana is yellow is not sufficient to represent it as ripe. — Fafner
Why stop there? Nothing would stop you from continuing on to question whether or not you even have a memory of a woman or even a memory of a word and how it is used.How do you know that you have a memory of your mother, and not some other woman that just looks like her? If you consider your memory in isolation from context (or 'use') then by itself it doesn't mean or represent anything. — Fafner
This makes no sense. The meaning of a yellow banana is that is it ripe. It's blackness means it is rotten. We don't need language to know this. We simply need experience with yellow and black bananas.What is true though is that for Wittgenstein 'meaning' is not an external relation (e.g. causal) between words and things: if word 'refers' to something then that something belongs to language, or has a symbolic function as much as the word which stands for that thing. — Fafner
And by referring to something with your words, that is what you mean. Just pointing a finger means one thing - referring. Pointing to a chair means referring to a chair.Meaning-as-use doesn't entail that words don't refer to things. If I point to a chair then I am referring to a chair, but we don't explain the meaning of a pointing finger by deferring to the chair; we explain the meaning of a pointing finger by deferring to its use. — Michael
Great. So then all animals that make sounds in social situations are also using a language.And other words are just sounds we make in particular social situations, mostly to elicit certain responses from others. — Michael
In other words, "hello" is just a sound we make (a social behavior) when we greet each other. We could then say that the sounds other animals make when they greet each other means "hello".That doesn't contradict what I said. It would just then mean that the meaning of "I greet you" is its use as a greeting, much like a handshake or a hug. — Michael
Philosophy is a science. The conclusions of one branch of the investigation of reality shouldn't contradict those of another. All knowledge must be integrated into a consistent whole.Well but that's not a philosophical question but a scientific one (about the psychological conditions under which some organism is capable of learning a human-like language). This was not the kind of question which interested Wittgenstein, and therefore it wasn't the question that he tried to answer when he talked about meaning and use (therefore the topic of this whole tread simply misses its target). What interested Wittgenstein were the logical features of language that make it function as a language, not the psychological conditions which allow some creature but not another to learn language - that has nothing to do with philosophy according to W'. — Fafner
Yes, you can use words as a tool, but what is it that you hope to accomplish by using words as a tool? Isn't it to trigger the concepts (that aren't words) in other people's minds? When you describe your trip to Rome, what is it that you want the listener to think about - just your words and how they are used - or do you want them to have visuals of the sights you experienced and are thinking about when you use those words? In order to say anything, you have to have in mind what it is you are referring to when you say it, or else what are you actually saying and what is it you hope to accomplish by speaking or writing?That doesn't contradict what I said. It would just then mean that the meaning of "I greet you" is its use as a greeting, much like a handshake or a hug. — Michael
