There is a type of word that has "inherent" meaning, onomatopoeia. — Echarmion
You could refer to a cow anyway you feel like making up your own word like "Goytsz" — Andrew4Handel
The only thing I can think of to ground language is experience via the senses creating ideas. — Andrew4Handel
I am not opposed to this strategy but what puzzles me is how meaning does not seem to reside in letters, words and sounds. — Andrew4Handel
But who would understand you? — Banno
One does not learn a language simply by looking around. — Banno
This is the feature and not the bug. It is the arbitrariness of a symbol that allows it to be the signifier of any state of interpretance. It is how thought and speech start off with a detachment from the world, and so become capable to referring freely to any possible world, any possible variety or division of experience. — apokrisis
In Chomsky's defence it seems that there must be innate cognitive modules to explain things like children's swift ability to learn any languages. — Andrew4Handel
I think that the letters M O O that make a word like moo are not identical with the sound but fit the conventional pronunciation assigned to those letters. — Andrew4Handel
In the case of pictures they are similar to what the writer wants someone to understand. — Andrew4Handel
However I don't know how hieroglyphics create sentences or information. — Andrew4Handel
This seems to be basic strategy in philosophy of language to make meaning start with something simple like basic colours, sounds or pictures or pointing and build out from there. But I think this strategy is limited to a small segment of language.
For example how would you represent "Yesterday" in a picture or "The Unconscious".
I am not opposed to this strategy but what puzzles me is how meaning does not seem to reside in letters, words and sounds. — Andrew4Handel
You would understand yourself. That seems to be to a large extent reality. — Andrew4Handel
Meaning, and any feelings derived from this process (arousal, stress, fear, laughter), is entirely self-generated. — NOS4A2
If meanings were in the words we’d understand a foreign language as soon as we heard it. Meaning is generated within. — NOS4A2
If meanings were in the words we’d understand a foreign language as soon as we heard it. Meaning is generated within.
This is why I believe that any platitude about the “power of words” is magical thinking and censorship a fool’s errand, because words have as much power as any other guttural sound or mark on paper. Meaning, and any feelings derived from this process (arousal, stress, fear, laughter), is entirely self-generated. In theory, one could learn to control this process and realize his power over language. — NOS4A2
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