What is the meaning of the usages of "meaning" that unites them? Is there a unitary concept they share? — hypericin
What is the meaning of the usages of "meaning" that unites them? Is there a unitary concept they share? — hypericin
Although some might take the view that every variation of meaning is merely the interplay of signs and signifiers. — Tom Storm
What is the meaning of the usages of "meaning" that unites them? Is there a unitary concept they share? — hypericin
Where this relationship obtains, you have meaning. And you can ask of anything, what is a/the Y to this X? — hypericin
Signs convey meaning, but not all meaning is conveyed by signs... Meaning is more than being signified — Leontiskos
"Meaning" seems to be a rather root or simple concept, not easily explicable in terms of other concepts. — Leontiskos
I guess you will find some answers: Meaning — javi2541997
signs and signifiers are arbitrary, and meaning is not fixed but constructed within specific cultural and historical contexts. — Tom Storm
Is there a unitary concept they share? — hypericin
we are essentially asking what sense did you make out of this artifact, behavior or phenomena, which is an open question — Tom Storm
Perhaps something like significance, resolution, comprehension, making-sense-of? "Meaning" seems to be a rather root or simple concept, not easily explicable in terms of other concepts. — Leontiskos
Then how did we learn it? — hypericin
I think it is complicated — hypericin
Words are not chosen at random, they meet the needs of the physical and cultural environments they find themselves in — hypericin
A 2014 review of the literature on sensemaking in organizations identified a dozen different categories of sensemaking and a half-dozen sensemaking related concepts (Maitlis & Christianson, 2014).
The categories of sensemaking included: constituent-minded, cultural, ecological, environmental, future-oriented, intercultural, interpersonal, market, political, prosocial, prospective, and resourceful. The sensemaking-related concepts included: sensebreaking, sensedemanding, sense-exchanging, sensegiving, sensehiding, and sense specification. — Sensemaking - wiki
My only contribution might be the above link, but I will be reading the replies in your thread because there are users who have more knowledge on this matter, and they would dive in (maybe). — javi2541997
I was wondering if these questions were part of metaphysics or epistemology. Well, it turns out that it is a matter of metaphysics, and specifically speaking, "A Kant-Friesian" approach. — javi2541997
Read the book O ye lovers of definition, and despair. — unenlightened
I had a peek and that was enough, thank you. — Amity
A sign of wisdom! — unenlightened
A book defining a word uses several thousand other words, each requiring a similar book length analysis to establish the meaning of. — unenlightened
...the very foolish like me have to read the whole book, and complete idiots have to start all over again on the exact same damn word. — unenlightened
I'm confused. Perhaps you can explain what you mean? — Amity
I agree, a look, and action, a poem, a life may contain meaning, not just signs. I am arguing that meaning is to that which conveys it as the signified is to signs. Sign-signified is one form of the meaning relationship. — hypericin
Then how did we learn it? — hypericin
I think it is complicated. — hypericin
Yes. I think that sensemaking is key. — Amity
The meaning is invariably in the human being. The meaning of a word, for example, is only constant at the point of a speaker or listener, her body, and never in the signs and mediums. — NOS4A2
1) There needs to be an internal aspect for meaning to obtain. If there is no mental aspect, meaning is not meaning. Meaning is something else (a function perhaps, like a program running). Meaning has to somehow have a point of view. Even knee-jerk commands and actions from those commands are had from a point of view.. a "feels like". If it doesn't "feel like" something, then it is not meaning-ful. Even if at some point there was an complete lack of mental-state during some speech-act, as long as later on, someone can look back at it, it has become meaning-ful. If that person lacked a mental state in perpetuity, then meaning was not had for that person. He basically behaved like a computer, he performed a function, he did not garner any "meaning". Actually, I am not even going to let myself get away with "function", because function mplies someone with ability for meaning, has programmed it. I am just going to say, "a state of affairs happened in the universe". I'll give myself enough charity there, but even then... — schopenhauer1
How do you account for something like a stop sign? If a foreigner asks you what it means, and you say, it is a spiritual recommendation to stop, meditate, and appreciate the immediate surroundings, you are quite objectively wrong.
human life doesn't have meaning. It isn't a referent for something else — GRWelsh
human life has value, but only because we value it. — GRWelsh
So we write"S" means that p
What we are lookign for, in asking about meaning, is what the bit in the middle is; the"il pleut" means that it is raining.
.....means that.....
There's a bit more to his argument than I give here... But the upshot is that we might produce a theory of meaning in which for every sentence S we produce some sentence P such that....is true if and only if...
"S" is true if and only if P
We have here a theory of meaning in which each sentence is replaced by one for which we know the circumstances in which it is true. And if we know the conditions under which a given sentence is true, then what more is there to its meaning? — Banno
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