the language is the same, the difference lies in each individual use of the one language. — Janus
But it will never be understood in exactly the same way by each user of the language, so it is in fact not the ‘same’ language. — Joshs
So to simplify things, I will choose ‘interpersonal communication is secondary and derived'. — Joshs
“ just as a man’s body and “soul” are but two aspects of his way of being in the world, so the word and the thought it indicates should not be considered two externally related terms: the word bears its meaning in the same way that the body incarnates a manner of behaviour.” Merleau-Ponty — Joshs
269. Let us remember that there are certain criteria in a man’s behaviour for his not understanding a word: that it means nothing to him, that he can do nothing with it. And criteria for his ‘thinking he understands’, attaching some meaning to the word, but not the right one. And lastly, criteria for his understanding the word correctly. In the second case, one might speak of a subjective understanding. And sounds which no one else understands but which I ‘appear to understand’ might be called a “private language”. — Wittgenstein, Philosophical Investigations
We are as inaccessible to ourselves as others are to us and vice versa. — StreetlightX
One's understanding of a public language does not itself constitute a language. That is, you don't interpret a public language via the "language" of one's subjective understanding (because one's subjective understanding is not a language). — Luke
It is the same language inasmuch as it has the same total lexicon. — Janus
There is no standard or template to transcend the interpretations — Joshs
If there are three of us in a room, one is speaking English, one French and the other German, we obviously don’t say that the three speakers are
are offering three interpretations of one language , because in this case the language is synonymous with the speaker. — Joshs
Understanding is exhibited (with all the public resonance 'exhibition' has), and not introspected. — StreetlightX
Objectivity is an idealization resulting from interpersonal correlations. It’s a shared faith that turns ‘similar’ into ‘same’. But the same is the same differently from person to person. — Joshs
You could always try the same argument about a game with equally established rules, such as chess - that everyone interprets/understands it differently, that everyone plays it by their own rules, that there is no standard or template to transcend the interpretations, that there is no singular game that we call "chess". It would be equally false. — Luke
To the extent that the unity of the word— what makes it recognizable as a word, as the same word, the unity of a phonic com plex and a sense— cannot be merged with the multiplicity of the sensible events of its employment nor does it depend on them, the sameness o f the word is ideal. It is the ideal possibility of repetition and it loses nothing with the reduction of any, and therefore of every empirical event marked by its appearance." (Voice and Phenomenon). — StreetlightX
I interpret Derrida as saying here that the same (word) is the same differently WITHIN one person from moment to moment. — Joshs
Sure you can change the nuanced meanings of words, create novel nuances, associations and so on. But all of those nuances are themselves intelligible, even to their creator, only insofar as they are given in a public language. — Janus
We don’t have to duplicate each other’s understanding to play chess or do science, we only have to approximate it — Joshs
201. [...]That there is a misunderstanding here is shown by the mere fact that in this chain of reasoning we place one interpretation behind another, as if each one contented us at least for a moment, until we thought of yet another lying behind it. For what we thereby show is that there is a way of grasping a rule which is not an interpretation, but which, from case to case of application, is exhibited in what we call “following the rule” and “going against it”.
That’s why there is an inclination to say: every action according to a rule is an interpretation. But one should speak of interpretation only when one expression of a rule is substituted for another.
202. That’s why ‘following a rule’ is a practice. And to think one is following a rule is not to follow a rule. And that’s why it’s not possible to follow a rule ‘privately’; otherwise, thinking one was following a rule would be the same thing as following it.
Nothing is Derrida's texts 'limits' iterability as function 'within' a person - whatever that could even mean. — StreetlightX
.. It is not necessary to imagine the death of the sender or of the receiver, to put the shopping list in one's pocket, or even to raise the pen above the paper in orderto interrupt oneself for a moment. — Joshs
To advocate such a prodigiously multitudinous way of metaphysical thinking would be to advocate an egregiously unparsimonious ontology. — Janus
Who is this ‘one’ who puts the shopping list in ‘one’s’ pocket? Who is this ‘oneself’ who is interrupting ‘oneself’ by changing the very sense of the meaning that ‘one’ intends, even before other persons are involved? — Joshs
And to think one is following a rule is not to follow a rule. And that’s why it’s not possible to follow a rule ‘privately’; otherwise, thinking one was following a rule would be the same thing as following it.
Sure you can change the nuanced meanings of words, create novel nuances, associations and so on. But all of those nuances are themselves intelligible, even to their creator, only insofar as they are given in a public language. — Janus
Nothing in Derrida warrants some kind of 'exclusivity' to an individual. It's an utterly wrongheaded reading. — StreetlightX
Again, you’re beginning from a presupposition of self and social as distinguishable entities — Joshs
To think of it, not of them, in other words, lest we become mired in a pointless, and indeed conceptually fatal, disunity. — Janus
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