Philosophy of Language is, in the end, the whole of philosophy. — Banno
For example, some philosophers have come up with a sense/meaning of knowledge that doesn't fit within the ordinary use of the word. Thus, they use the word completely out of it's home. — Sam26
Maybe my emphasis on Wittgenstein is overblown. If you think that, then explain why, but don't do it if you don't understand Wittgenstein. — Sam26
Ya, it would be interesting to divide the problems up into various kinds. — Sam26
And you're sure what an 'essence' is? Have you read no debates on the meaning of 'subjective? — Pseudonym
Philosophy of time: presentism, block universes etc. — fdrake
Metaphysics of science: emergence, character of natural law — fdrake
Political philosophy: the vast majority of issues in it. — fdrake
Logic: foundations of mathematics — fdrake
Ethics: real world ethical issues — fdrake
Is that just wishful thinking, or do you have some reason to think this? If you could provide an example of some philosophical terms whose meaning you think is widely agreed on (with a rough idea of what that agreed meaning is), that might help. — Pseudonym
to understand 'the philosophy of language' is to have to understand a great deal more than language. — StreetlightX
If you can describe a philosophical problem and then define each word you just used in a way that will gain even a substantial minority of agreement then I'd be prepared to concede this. Thus far, I've not found such a thing to be possible — Pseudonym
The question is, which or what philosophical problems are we talking about. — Sam26
One of the reasons I've spent so much time studying philosophy of language, is, obviously, that language is the medium in which philosophical discourse takes place. It seems to follow, that having a good understanding of the way language works, in terms of concepts and meaning, is crucial to having a clear understanding of not only philosophy, but other subjects as well. — Sam26
But there can be nothing objective about this, this basic act of telling a story (true story, or not). This is the realm of narrative, not objectivity. — hypericin
Whereas, in consequence of nominalism, which was in many respects the precursor to empiricism, this distinguishing characteristic of the ‘faculty of reason’ is generally no longer recognised, with considerable consequences for modern philosophy of mind and especially theory of meaning. — Wayfarer
Rationality always works within a delimited field. Death is outside that. Its beyond rationality/irrationality. — csalisbury
There are people who believe there is a "language of thought." I reject the notion because it leads to an infinite regress. — Dfpolis
If you think that ideas are merely words we speak internally, then you are more likely to be a nominalist. — Dfpolis
Perhaps there is a nominalist on the forum that would like to provide a stronger defense of his/her position. — Dfpolis
Unless there is something real to connect universal ideas/concepts to their instances, there is no reason not to call anything by any universal name. For example, I can decide to call my dog a cat, while I call yours a turtle. — Dfpolis
Nominalism says universals are only names, with no foundation in reality. Conceptualism says they are only concepts, with no foundation in reality. — Dfpolis
If the only universal things are names, then they exist, but only as conventional signs -- as human inventions. — Dfpolis
Perhaps a less confusing way to put it is that nominalism doesn't necessarily have to be committed to the denial of universals as such. What it denies is rather the 'reality' of universals; it says that that universals only exist, insofar as they do exist, as names, as nominata, and not as something substantial - — StreetlightX
Have I misunderstood the OP? — Hanover
So is there supposed to be an essence of snowness, had by, and only by, all snows? And the discussion here is to try to work out what that snow-essence is?
Or are you all just disagreeing about how to use the word "snow'? — Banno
Dismissing this view as behaviourism might appeal to some; including those who are more interested in winning than thinking. — Banno
Are your beliefs to be found between your ears? — Banno
thought and belief are not things, but shorthand in a word game about explaining our actions. — Banno
So conventionally we mean H2O. But there's nothing prohibiting a different usage. Is there a problem here? — Andrew M
Ordinary language use is ambiguous and thrives on that fact. — apokrisis
Nice fluffy 6 sided crystals of H2O = snow. What do the crystals on the south pole of Mars look like? Cubes. — Bitter Crank
There are other kinds of beliefs that are pre-linguistic. — Sam26
the scientific image of something can change depending on how you're capturing it in various descriptions, models, applications, theoretical explanations, etc. — John Doe
But if we had snow of different origins here (and we probably have, but I have no idea of their kinds), the word would be "naturally ambiguous" (like sand) rather than just, er, "philosophically ambiguous" :D. — Mariner
