The way I understand it, the movements of the body are not separate from the body, but are just aspects of it; so, I don't know how not to distinguish between the two.
But how do you help with this, where the whole picture and every word in it is either confused or wrong. — Antony Nickles
No reason to get excited
The thief, he kindly spoke
There are many here among us
Who feel that life is but a joke
But, uh, but you and I, we've been through that
And this is not our fate
So let us stop talkin' falsely now
The hour's getting late, hey
The aspects of the body are the body, at least when I look. What distinguishes them beyond the words used to describe it? — NOS4A2
You're thinking of "the world" as not including origin stories, mythology, religious belief, etc. That there is, for example, nothing meaningful to anyone about having the world be created. This is an example of judgment by one standard, e.g. what is "real". — Antony Nickles
I just disagree that there are metaphysical truths we can pull out of the way we speak. It's frequently difficult to even pin point how our speech refers, much less discover great truths in grammar. — frank
but he is providing evidence of how the world works, — Antony Nickles
Do you mean if everyone believed in God, that would make him real? — frank
So the question "Is God real?" would be framed "Is that a real god? — Antony Nickles
I don't think there are much in the way of metaphysical implications from Austin, — frank
Austin is denying there is "reality" (directly addressing the metaphysical), — Antony Nickles
all this dismissive talk of "just language" and "quibbling" — Antony Nickles
Well, for a start, the word "real" in "nothing is really as it seems" should bring on some hesitancy. What's it doing there? We might take it out, and see what happens. Consider "nothing is as it seems". Well, that doesn't seem right. It seems I am writing this, and you are now reading it, to the extent that one could not make sense of "It seems I am not writing this, and you are not reading it". — Banno
I'm afraid this triggers one of my hobby-horses. Language is also for expressing emotions, giving orders, consoling people, deceiving people, inspiring the troops, shaming wrong-doers and many other things. Focusing on one, admittedly important, use of language narrows the vision of philosophy and distorts the understanding of people living in the world.
There is, I believe, even an argument that the origins of language, assuming they lie in animal communication systems are severely practical things like expressing peaceful or aggressive intentions, making demands, expressing anger, fear, pleasure and pain and such.
The theoretical uses of language are not the core, but a derivative, and arguably still marginal, use of language. — Ludwig V
I really didn't see him as doing that at all. Interesting how differently two people can read the same paragraphs, huh? — frank
'Real or not?' does not always come up, can't always be raised. We do raise this question only when, to speak rather roughly, suspicion assails us--in some way or other things may be not what they seem; and we can raise this question only if there is a way, or ways, in which things may be not what they seem. — Austin p.69 (my emphasis in bold)
You'd have to give me some reason how this is not claiming evidence of how things are or are not done, or when they can be. — Antony Nickles
What metaphysical truth do you see in that? — frank
People do seem to have picked up the puzzle about why, if Austin wants to deny reality, he doesn't just come out with it. He seems to dance around the question with marginal and trivial comments on how the word "real" is used, and so forth. I think someone should at least try to explain why. — Ludwig V
marginal and trivial comments on how the word "real" is used — Ludwig V
"'Real or not?' does not always come up, can't always be raised. We do raise this question only when, to speak rather roughly, suspicion assails us--in some way or other things may be not what they seem; and we can raise this question only if there is a way, or ways, in which things may be not what they seem. — Austin p.69 (my emphasis in bold)
You'd have to give me some reason how this is not claiming evidence of how things are or are not done, or when they can be. — Antony Nickles
What metaphysical truth do you see in that? — frank
His first reaction might have been to point out that this is some of what language can do, but certainly not all. In How to do things with words he goes into this in more detail, but as points out we also command, question, doubt, and so on. With these words, we don't just percieve the world, we change it.1. Language is for expressing, describing and communicating thoughts and the contents of perception. — Corvus
I was responding to what seemed like your dismissal that Austin:
"is providing evidence of how the world works, — Antony Nickles
I really didn't see him as doing that at all..."
Does it make sense now? — Antony Nickles
It's a cliché, but you have missed the wood for the trees. Austin is not just analysing speech. — Banno
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.