and especially its last long paragraph is almost impossible to disentangle — The Great Whatever
Is expression a sub-species of indication, just one kind of indication?
...
if there really is no species-genus relation between indication and expression, and the two are strictly distinct. In what sense then are both 'signs' at all? — The Great Whatever
Here is a question to keep in mind. Is it really true that all expressions contain indication, and not all indications are expressions? Or is this an assumption of convenience made by Husserl, to support an argued position?
So for Derrida, the question becomes "what is the sign in general". — Metaphysician Undercover
Importantly, Husserl wants to argue the opposite. — csalisbury
Do you mean Derrida wants to argue this?
I can't find a good angle to get a conversation rolling. What were some of the questions/concerns you had?There are lots of questions with this, but that will do for now.
Does any of that seem legit or does it feel like bullshit? Be honest <3 — csalisbury
My approach has been to treat Derrida, in these early chapters, as a neutral exegete* who - & this may be a little too cute - is performing his own sort of epoche. I think, at least at this stage, he's bracketing the validity of these distinctions, and is simply trying to suss out the immanent logic of Husserl's project. — csalisbury
To start with, what does it mean to say a linguistic sign is indicative? The clear cases Derrida alludes to in Ch. 2, like brands and canals and chalk marks, make intuitive sense. But what is the linguistic expression 'indicating' in this way? It's not at all clear, and so the initial problem seems to have little compelling intuitive evidence. — The Great Whatever
Also, without looking too far ahead to the third chapter, if the category of indication seems a little fuzzy, it's perhaps best to consider it a purely negative category for now; it is everything that does not fall under the ambit of expression. Whether or not this should remain a provisional move will remain to be seen. — StreetlightX
Also, without looking too far ahead to the third chapter, if the category of indication seems a little fuzzy, it's perhaps best to consider it a purely negative category for now; it is everything that does not fall under the ambit of expression — StreetlightX
There are scattered clues that Derrida (and possibly Husserl in turn) actually mean two separate things by language always having an intermixed indicative element:
1) The linguistic sign indicates the mental state of the speaker.
2) The linguistic sign is attached to some sensible sign-vehicle, like a written word, that indicates its expressive content? Or the expressive sign itself, which is separate from this sensible component? It's not clear what's meant here, and several allusions are used interchangeably without clarification.
As for 1), it's very unclear, I would even say outright dubious, that the purpose of linguistic expression is to relay some mental state of the speaker. Usually we are concerned with whatever the sentence is talking about, not what the speaker is thinking about at the time of uttering it – and certainly whatever the sentence is talking about is what its expressive content deals in, not the speaker's thoughts or experiences!
Nevertheless, we know perfectly well what it means, in virtue of knowing how to speak English — The Great Whatever
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