My only quibble that I can see is that it emerges by virtue of drawing correlations, full stop — Possibility
...given that meaning exists before it emerges... — Possibility
To say that meaning emerges by virtue of drawing correlations only ‘between different things’ rules out the possibility of meaning emerging from a correlation between a ‘thing’ and some undiscovered existence of meaning. — Possibility
...given that meaning exists before it emerges...
— Possibility
That's not a given. How can something exist before existing? Emergence is coming into existence. — creativesoul
It exists in it's entirety long before we've acquired the means to discover and/or take proper account of it. — creativesoul
Either way, I misinterpreted your statement here:
It exists in it's entirety long before we've acquired the means to discover and/or take proper account of it.
— creativesoul
as existing prior to emerging. — Possibility
Can't wait for the disappointing answer to this hot mess of a riddle. — Nils Loc
To say that meaning emerges by virtue of drawing correlations only ‘between different things’ rules out the possibility of meaning emerging from a correlation between a ‘thing’ and some undiscovered existence of meaning. — Possibility
It's the aim of all translation... — creativesoul
I see. Understandable.
"Meaning exists in it's entirety long before we've acquired the means to discover and/or take proper account of it" was just making the point that (some)meaning exists in it's entirety prior to language.
In the above, we could exchange "exists" with "emerges" and lose nothing meaningful. Emergent meaning is newly formed. I would not agree that meaning exists prior to being formed, although I realize that several schools of thought believe otherwise. — creativesoul
To say that meaning emerges by virtue of drawing correlations only ‘between different things’ rules out the possibility of meaning emerging from a correlation between a ‘thing’ and some undiscovered existence of meaning.
— Possibility
This deserves revisitation.
That's not what I said. — creativesoul
All purpose is full of meaning. Not all meaning is full of purpose. — creativesoul
"Meaning exists in it's entirety long before we've acquired the means to discover and/or take proper account of it" was just making the point that (some)meaning exists in it's entirety prior to language. — creativesoul
So you’re saying that meaning may exist prior to language, but we have no means to discover it as such. — Possibility
How would you know that it exists fully formed, then? — Possibility
...would you agree that any possible relation is meaningful? — Possibility
Meaning without purpose, aye? Can you demonstrate that? — praxis
I would completely agree that many relationships exist prior to any and all language use(causality, spatiotemporal, symbiotic, existential dependency, elemental constituency, significance, familial, biological, etc.); that some relations do not(they depend upon language use for language use is part of the relationship); that some language dependent meaningful relations exist prior to an individual language user's acquisition thereof; that some relationships exist prior to meaning; etc..
...but I would not agree that all relations(or any possible relation) are(is) meaningful. — creativesoul
I do not just mean that things exist in relation to a self-conscious subject, but some meaningful relations certainly do, and cannot exist in absence thereof. — creativesoul
I should have further qualified... some things... are in relation to a self-conscious subject, and cannot exist in absence thereof.
Edited to add:
Oh, never-mind. I already had properly quantified that claim. — creativesoul
If some relations can exist ‘prior to’ meaning, and some cannot exist as a meaningful relation in absence of a self-conscious subject, who’s to say it isn’t the same relation, which exists meaningfully only in the presence of a self-conscious subject, yet also exists in its absence, ‘prior to’ or regardless of meaning? — Possibility
In other words, is ‘meaningful’ an inherent property of some relations, or a possible attribute of all relations? — Possibility
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