1) The linguistic sign indicates the mental state of the speaker. — The Great Whatever
Surely I know what the sign means in virtue of my linguistic competence, and not in virtue of my ability to mind-read; and furthermore the word would mean the same thing, in the sense we're interested in (logicity), regardless of who said them, excluding first-person indexicals and so on. — The Great Whatever
in this sense a signpost indeed doesn't mean anything — The Great Whatever
Yeah, I think you're right and that's why Derrida renders bedeutung as 'vouloir-dire.' — csalisbury
Yeah, this confused me too. I don't speak French, but there is a cognate in Spanish, querer decir, which also means 'mean,' but you commonly use it to ask what a word or piece of language in the abstract means, like ¿qué quiere decir 'caballo?' – 'what does 'caballo' mean?' — The Great Whatever
Since contamination is always produced in real colloquy (at once because in real colloquy expression indicates a content that is forever hidden from intuition, namely, the lived-experience of the other, and because the ideal content of the Bedeutung and the spiritual side of the expression are united in real colloquy with the sensible side)...
...we would be tempted to say that this hiatus [between fact and essence], which defines the very space of phenomenology, does not preexist the question of language, and it is not inserted into phenomenology as within one domain or as one problem among others. It is opened up, on the contrary, only in and by the possibility of language.
I lose my shape, I tumble
And I drift across the sea
I lose my thoughts, I watch them
In graceful movements flow
I catch the raging darkness
And transform it into light
I try to catch a second
But it slips out of my hand
When I reach the
Glorious
My silence within
Enormous
A journey begins
All the words fall so silent
No need to react
I'll remain in my silence within
Illuminated highways, only used for thoughts
They're winding through the mountain still covered with snow
When touching time they ignore it, it stands still
The only thing that matters is the silent inner will
Increasing the innermost recesses
Of the heart and of the soul
The utmost of the inner
Revelations is the call
Inside the echoes of the laughter
Underneath a waterfall
Beyond the growing trees of knowledge
In a forest still unknown
Untie
Unfold the silence with
Unveil
We caught the silence within
We sold
We caught (we caught) (we caught)
I watch the sounds, they're fading
Into a silhouette
Of all the silent courts I've reached
But lost along my way
I touch vibrating timbres
Inside my silent voice
Out of an ocean of my thoughts
I catch a single drop
When I reach the
Glorious
My silence within
Melodious
My journey begins
All the notes fall so silent
No need to react
I'll remain in my silence within
I'll remain in my silence within
Yet the origin of indication, for Husserl, lies in the association of ideas (as the footnote on page 25 tells us — csalisbury
Husserl still sees us as discovering ideal logical truths/relations/orders, rather than transcendentally constituting them. Thus, at this stage the processes whereby we discover these truths must be something entirely separate from the truths themselves (otherwise the psychologists are right.) In other words expression must be absolutely separable in principle from indication, otherwise expression (and so the order of ideal logical/mathematical truths) falls right back into the maw of psychologism. — csalisbury
Husserl's whole enterprise–and well beyond the Logical Investigations–will be threatened if the Verflechtung attaching indication onto expression is absolutely irreducible and in principle inextricable, if indication were not added onto expression as a more or less tenacious bond, but inhabited the essential intimacy of the movement of expression.
In other words expression must be absolutely separable in principle from indication, otherwise expression (and so the order of ideal logical/mathematical truths) falls right back into the maw of psychologism. — csalisbury
It also seems to me that Husserl's definition of indication is not actually as broad as Derrida makes it out to be (causing him to drill down to 'indication proper,' which excludes demonstration), because Husserl clarifies in his definition that he is speaking of non-evident motivation, which has a precise technical meaning that excludes demonstration, which requires evident motivation in the sense of having adequate evidence for its claims. But this is less important.
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