the paradox is still pertinent. — Shawn
this vagueness that irritates philosophers. — Shawn
Why do you think this vagueness of the predicates such as a "heap" or a "hole" arise in language? — Shawn
These vague predicates are very heavily loaded with human perception and often cause confusion in language. — Shawn
My own instinct is that language has usage, not meaning and for everyday functioning such words have been more than adequate. — Tom Storm
'What is a "heap"?' — Shawn
Old English heap "pile (of things); great number, crowd, multitude (of persons)," from West Germanic *haupaz (source also of Old Saxon hop, Old Frisian hap, Middle Low German hupe, Dutch hoop, German Haufe "heap"), of uncertain origin. The group is perhaps related to Old English heah "high" (see high), but OED suggests a common origin with Latin cubare "lie down," and Boutkan says it is probably not Indo-European at all.
An untidy collection of objects, place on top of each other. — Banno
But you understood that, and as a competent speaker of English you use the word correctly, as well as in jest.
SO what is the confusion? — Banno
I would even argue that cognitively a "heap" is what can be called a phenomenological expression if its so inexact. — Shawn
I see the real issue being the arbitrariness of the distinctions we make for everything we talk about. A heap is just an easily understood example. — T Clark
Well, it's a prime example in philosophy, and with my concern over epistemic discursions over criteria I think, it's a really interesting case example to argue for a more formal way of using language. — Shawn
It's context. If someone says to me; 'I'll give you heaps of money." I might ask, "How much is heaps?" But if someone says, "There's a heap of wood in the back yard for the fire", I probably will be satisfied by this. — Tom Storm
We starting confusing ourselves when we lose track of the difference between the world and the words we use to describe it. That's what we're talking about when we talk about paradoxes. — T Clark
How is it not context? — Tom Storm
Can you show me a specific example of how this language imprecision cause harm or an insurmountable problem? — Tom Storm
It's not that the use of "heap" is arbitrary; Capricious, whimsical, random. — Banno
So, what kind of world does the ontology of a 'heap' inhabit? Purely, "worldly" or phenomenological; because the law of excluded middle wont let both be satisfied at the same time, no? I might be wrong; but, a heap comes off as a epistemological problem, as specified by philosophers and their criteria for other terms such as 'holes' or heaps upon heaps. — Shawn
"Heap" is a label we put on a phenomenon we observe in the world. The word is artificial, human-made. Is that what you mean by phenomenological? — T Clark
My view is that a grouping of items is an existent entity wherever that grouping exists, whether that's in a person's mind or outside the mind. In other words, there's one existent heap outside the mind, but another existent entity is a person's mental image of that heap. Anyways, that's my view. — Roger
...what am I missing in Shawn's identified problem here? — Tom Storm
Let's assume that vagueness arises where the law of bivalence is not clearly defined or sharp, for a heap. Therefore, what can one say about this problem of the valence of what a "heap" actually is. — Shawn
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