Any strenuous objections so far? — Srap Tasmaner
You seem to be suggesting that you can't create a bowl without a language. I'm sure that pre-linguistic man created bowls of some sort, or maybe you're referring to a particular kind of bowl, say plastic bowls. Even if you're right, it seems like a stretch to the conclude that because a thing (maybe stove is more appropriate), is created by language users, that the cat's belief is dependent upon language. — Sam26
When I use the phrase "dependent upon language," I'm referring to the use of concepts as part of a statement of belief. So, the cat is not dependent upon language in this sense.
You're adding another sense of "dependent upon language" that doesn't involve the direct use of concepts, which seems to be an indirect dependence. Am I understanding your point, or not? Mostly I'm talking about concepts, in particular the concept truth. The difference maybe in our focus.
utterly sterile and un-insightful in grappling with why and how humans actually use language. — Joshs
There are no words or sentences outside o f their actual context use — Joshs
and in their use a word does not point at an object, it creates the object in that it produces a new sense of meaning. — Joshs
But without more I can't judge. — Moliere
a good way into the role truth - or like concepts such as accuracy and felicity — fdrake
There are no words or sentences outside o f their actual context use
— Joshs
That's literally false, for obvious reasons. — Srap Tasmaner
If you think there is no sense whatsoever in which language can be used as a medium for modeling the world, I won't be saying much that makes sense to you. — Srap Tasmaner
If I say "Pat's house is green," and you say, "Pat's house is aqua," can we still be considered users of the same model? Do we have different models, or do we disagree about which sentence is part of the model? — Srap Tasmaner
You say: the point isn’t the word, but its meaning, and you think of the meaning as a thing of the same kind as the word, though also different from the word. Here the word, there the meaning. The money, and the cow that you can buy with it. (But contrast: money, and it's uses). — PI §120
Do we need an account of how disagreement is possible? — Srap Tasmaner
The question stays, what is the nature of such a disagreement? About what do these two people disagree? — Srap Tasmaner
(1) Are we really either entitled or required to say there is a model here at all, or are we really only talking about what people agree to say and not say?
If you argue first that being a user of a model just is saying certain things not others, and nothing else, you can quickly reach the conclusion that the model itself is unnecessary. — Srap Tasmaner
I'm wondering if instead you might address the limits of the notion of language as a model. — Banno
Perhaps you would find it helpful to adjust your expectations regarding what we can do with language. — creativesoul
How do we(or you) avoid anthropomorphism? — creativesoul
I'd use something like Davidson's argument in On the very idea... to show that there cannot be multiple models; and hence that the notion of a model is superfluous — Banno
There's no model? Or just one model? Which is it? — Tate
Contrary to Davidson, there are many conceptual schemes-models , not because of a presumed split between language and empirical world as he claims conceptual relativists believe , but because the inseparability of model and world means that there are as many empirical worlds as there are models. — Joshs
I've managed to fall into a place where I get money enough for tea and biscuits while doing whatever I want. What's curious, in such circumstances, is how this alters what one wants....while I'm working (you know, for money) — Srap Tasmaner
Can you offer a no-models account of disagreement... — Srap Tasmaner
But how do we know any of this? What's our vantage point? Why not be satisfied with phenomenology? — Tate
Ah, I see you have already done some critique. Excellent. Here you move towards my view; that there is no model. — Banno
It seems, then, that the models must have something in common if they are to be considered models of the neighbourhood. We must be able to say that this house, in one model, is the same as that house, in the other. There must be some basis for our being able to translate between the models, if we are to say they model the neighbourhood. — Banno
And the final step is to say that the shared model we each access just is the neighbourhood. — Banno
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