• A Seagull
    615
    That communication presupposes the mutual ability to communicate - as defined above. But you're concerned with ambiguity, is that correct? I weigh 196 pounds. What is ambiguous about that?tim wood

    It is not particularly ambiguous, but it is also over-precise. You do not weigh 196.00000000000000000000 lbs. so what do you estimate are the error margins for your weight?
  • Shawn
    12.6k
    Language has the sole purpose of communication. And of course there are limits to the efficacy of communication, you can think of it as a bandwidth problem.A Seagull

    Why do you call it a bandwidth problem?
  • A Seagull
    615
    Language has the sole purpose of communication. And of course there are limits to the efficacy of communication, you can think of it as a bandwidth problem. — A Seagull
    Why do you call it a bandwidth problem?
    Wallows

    The rate at which I can communicate data from my mind to yours is limited by the means of the communication ie sounds, or symbols on a piece of paper; its a pretty inefficient process.
  • Shawn
    12.6k
    The rate at which I can communicate data from my mind to yours is limited by the means of the communication ie sounds, or symbols on a piece of paper; its a pretty inefficient process.A Seagull

    The conceptual schema that is language, doesn't seem to be about data (information) passing one mind from the other?

    I'm surprised to see this sentiment so adhered to.
  • A Seagull
    615
    The conceptual schema that is language, doesn't seem to be about data (information) passing one mind from the other?

    I'm surprised to see this sentiment so adhered to.
    Wallows

    What 'conceptual schema'?

    What 'sentiment'?
  • tim wood
    8.8k
    That goes to appropriate criteria. Within which, no ambiguity.
  • A Seagull
    615
    3.7k

    ↪A Seagull That goes to appropriate criteria. Within which, no ambiguity.
    tim wood

    What 'appropriate criteria'?
  • Shawn
    12.6k
    What 'conceptual schema'?A Seagull

    Well, isn't language a sort of conceptual schema? We all learn the same stuff at school, so nobody is really more efficient at communication?

    What 'sentiment'?A Seagull

    That's like saying that people are like computers and transmit knowledge in the bulk of it through language use.
  • tim wood
    8.8k
    Well, that's an observational statement about something within the world-view of any participants of the conversation. Rather scientific and exact. But, most of the language isn't like that, so we might assume this as a statement immune to the sentiments of the need to qualify statements that are quantitative.Wallows

    Accuracy and truth are not aspects of ambiguity; they're different considerations. Can you please try to be a little less mysterious?
  • Shawn
    12.6k
    Accuracy and truth are not aspects of ambiguity; they're different considerations.tim wood

    Uhh, well. It's a matter of semantics, then?
  • Shawn
    12.6k
    @Banno, any thoughts?
  • tim wood
    8.8k
    What 'appropriate criteria'?A Seagull
    Well, for example, the notion of cost per pound v. healthy weight. My doctor regards my weight as represented as healthy. How exactly accurate the weight, or how healthy, not in question. We have shared meaning and understanding.

    A Japanese purveyor of fresh tuna-fish, on the other hand - and his customers - might be very picky indeed as to the exact accuracy of the weight, to a whole different standard. .
  • tim wood
    8.8k
    Uhh, well. It's a matter of semantics, then?Wallows

    Time for you to tell us what it is you have in mind with "ambiguity."
  • A Seagull
    615
    Well, isn't language a sort of conceptual schema? We all learn the same stuff at school, so nobody is really more efficient at communication?Wallows

    Communication is a two-tired process, there is the sender and there is the receiver. Learning is a very complex process and not directly linked to communication. The interpreted meaning of a communication can differ from its literal meaning.

    That's like saying that people are like computers and transmit knowledge in the bulk of it through language use.Wallows
    Well of course! What other process can there be for the 'transmission of knowledge'?
  • A Seagull
    615
    What 'appropriate criteria'? — A SeagullWell, for example, the notion of cost per pound v. healthy weight. My doctor regards my weight as represented as healthy. How exactly accurate the weight, or how healthy, not in question. We have shared meaning and understanding.tim wood

    Well yes I was thinking that the information about your weight would be of more interest to your doctor than to a fellow philosopher!
  • Shawn
    12.6k
    Time for you to tell us what it is you have in mind with "ambiguity."tim wood

    Vagueness? Maybe, this can be demonstrated by a person lying about that fact?

    There seems to me, to be some standard to communication that we implicitly agree to. That standard seems to get muddled when one talks about trying to qualify it, being that phrase: "I know that/how".
  • Shawn
    12.6k
    Well of course! What other process can there be for the 'transmission of knowledge'?A Seagull

    One in which, someone learns some new facts about how to use language?
  • A Seagull
    615
    Well of course! What other process can there be for the 'transmission of knowledge'? — A Seagull
    One in which, someone learns some new facts about how to use language?
    Wallows

    But that itself is a 'communication'.
  • Shawn
    12.6k
    But that itself is a 'communication'.A Seagull

    What do you mean?
  • A Seagull
    615
    But that itself is a 'communication'. — A Seagull
    What do you mean?
    Wallows

    The only way you can learn 'new facts about how to use language' is through communication, using language.
  • tim wood
    8.8k
    Vagueness? Maybe, this can be demonstrated by a person lying about that fact?

    There seems to me, to be some standard to communication that we implicitly agree to. That standard seems to get muddled when one talks about trying to qualify it, being that phrase: "I know that/how".
    Wallows

    Call it refinement, and the sometimes need for it for accuracy/clarity. But these have noting to do with ambiguity.

    A definition: adjective (of language), open to more than one interpretation; having a double meaning.
    "ambiguous phrases.". Unclear or inexact because a choice between alternatives has not been made.
    "the election result was ambiguous."

    Thus ambiguity is an artifact of the language actually used, and as such calls for correction, not refinement.
  • 3017amen
    3.1k


    Fun question...perhaps the Subjectivist or Subjective Idealist would say something like : "No, you really don't know!"
  • Shawn
    12.6k
    Thus ambiguity is an artifact of the language actually used, and as such calls for correction, not refinement.tim wood

    This doesn't make much sense to me. It seems that refinement comes first, and then a correction can ensue? But, some degree of ambiguity is always present.
  • Relativist
    2.2k
    Or stated, otherwise, how does one set up a schema to decrease the vagueness of the word phrase "I know"?Wallows
    Most commonly, people mean that they have a high degree of certainty when they claim, "I know". The only way to decrease ambiguity is through discussion - you will not get the english speaking world to change their ways.
  • tim wood
    8.8k
    But, some degree of ambiguity is always present.Wallows
    My point would be that sometimes clarity is not achieved, but that ambiguity is an either/or, depending on the words. That is, there is not always some degree of ambiguity present. And moreover, there should not be. Ambiguity, then, is in the language itself, not in the usage. In usage, it's better described as ignorance or viciousness.
  • deletedusercb
    1.7k
    Well, that's an observational statement about something within the world-view of any participants of the conversation. Rather scientific and exact. But, most of the language isn't like that, so we might assume this as a statement immune to the sentiments of the need to qualify statements that are quantitative.Wallows
    Could you give an example of a kind of qualification that might make you think an assertion was less vague?

    It seems to me that 'I know' is a clear statement, though obviously not a complete one. The person may or may not be correct, but we get what they are claiming. They have excellent grounds to believe that X is the case. It fits whatever rigor (if any) their epistemology has.

    We can't come up with a way to qualify the statement, since it would need different more complete explanations for the different users of that phrase. Because different people, even within the same paradigm, have different criteria and different degrees of rigor.

    This is language we are talking about. We cannot make individual phrases, in general, be 100% clear. And if we did, they would be so specfic as to be less useful.

    A scientific journal can have specific criteria for what it will publish in a sense as well grounded conclusions.

    But words and phrases are meant for all of us to use to communicate in a vast array of contexts.

    I am with that the word is clear. One can use other words if one wants to be more specific about one's criteria, the process of deciding that you know, rather than, say 'believe' or 'think' X is the case.

    Every word you would use in your clarification of 'I know' could then be criticized as vague, since one could always go into more detail. And any clarification of the phrase 'I know' would either be just as vague or not as generally useful.
  • Metaphysician Undercover
    12.5k
    E.g., "I weigh 196 pounds," is arguably never, ever exactly true. .tim wood

    Right, and that's exactly why the phrase is ambiguous. We don't know who weighed you, how they weighed you, when they weighed you, and so the phrase is ambiguous. We cannot pinpoint the meaning of it. What does it mean for a human being, whose weight is changing by the moment, to say "I weigh …" and quote a static quantity? As there is clearly no correct way to interpret this statement, it is a perfect example of ambiguity.
  • Jamal
    9.2k
    I would have deleted the OP if I'd seen it before it generated a discussion. It's so lacking in anything philosophical or interesting that it looks like just an attempt to get on the main page instead of the Lounge, where your threads usually end up.

    You don't know what "know" means? Have you looked it up? Have you got anything to say about how it has been treated by philosophers?

    In what way is its use vague, as you keep on saying it is, with no explanation? You have not described the problem with "I know" or how it is vague. It's your OP that is vague. There is no clear question, and what there is doesn't make much sense.

    It seems inherent, that we assume that the other person "knows"Wallows

    Not at all. When someone says they know, we don't just assume they do, unless it seems fairly uncontroversial and we don't have reason to doubt it, in which case we might give them the benefit of the doubt. But you don't give any context anyway; there are different ways of using the word.

    What is the philosophical issue? What does this have to do with formal languages, which is something you brought up?
  • deletedusercb
    1.7k
    When a person says, "I know", what do they really mean?Wallows

    They mean

    X is true
    and
    they have no doubt X is true.

    That's what they mean and it is clear.

    What does IT mean if they say it?

    It means they have no doubt X is the case.

    Is X the case? Maybe maybe not.

    But that has nothing to do with the meaning. It seems like you are conflating the truth value of the that clause with the meaning of the sentence. The meaning of the sentence is clear. Whether the that clause in and of itself is true is another matter.

    I know that Idaho is the largest state.

    The person is telling us that they have no doubt it is the case that Idaho is.......

    The truth value of the that clause here is false. But that does not affect the meaning of 'know' in the least. He means that it is true and he has no doubt about it.

    Another way to describe this is you are equivocating on the word means.

    Means as in what is the person conveying.
    And then the other means as in what are the consequences of hearing this assertion. That we accept their assertion about Idaho? or not?

    Two different types of 'means'.

    There is nothing unclear about the meaning of know.
  • Shawn
    12.6k
    Could you give an example of a kind of qualification that might make you think an assertion was less vague?Coben

    Usually, when we want to do this, we look for less ambiguous phrases to get the point across. The ambiguous "I know", can get substituted with "to the best of my knowledge", which seems to encapsulate the phrase into something coherent or palpable.
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