If you read my words and are capable of understanding you will find the answer. If you are not capable, that is not the fault of the words. Unlike that word, my words are in English.
If what I'm thinking of is not a "word", then what is it instead? And how should I make sense of it?
Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana.
I understand the words because I’m capable of supplying meaning to the symbols you’ve typed out. — NOS4A2
To be honest, I thought you meant fruit flies like a banana, as in fruit takes flight like bananas do. It wasn’t until your clarification, and you telling me it was in two different senses, did I understand. So maybe it isn’t the use at all. — NOS4A2
I recently discovered that others can think in words. Some have even admitted to hearing an inner monologue, not so much as an audio hallucination, but as a fundamental component of their thinking. Having been unable to find these words or hear these voices myself I naturally began to envy their powers and the company they keep. — NOS4A2
This has been a bit of a phenomenon recently.
Apparently, about 60% of people have no internal monologue https://irisreading.com/is-it-normal-to-not-have-an-internal-monologue/ (good explainer).
I've found the inverse of your position baffling. I can't work out how to interact with the world if there is no internal symbolic representation of the most common and apparently effective communication mode. Perhaps this accounts for a differential in critical, systematic thinking between the two groups.
With regard the OP question; I think that inhabit minds and cause more than their form implies, but aren't that themselves.
As such, I project that the opposite leads to opposing views, which to me hinge on a kind of superstition regarding language and its effects. — NOS4A2
Should you not have put down "meanings" rather than "symbols'?
Symbols? - sounds like pictorial entity. Words are made of the alphabets, and has meanings, not symbols
My problem is that if the word-forms conveyed meaning, we’d know what they meant by reading them. It is precisely because they do not convey meaning that we do not understand them, not unless some Rosetta Stone or human being is able to supply them with meaning. The drift of meaning over time suggests much the same. — NOS4A2
For example, Chinese words are based on the pictorials of the worldly objects, but they still have meanings, and it is the meanings they communicate on, not the pictorials.I mean pictorial or verbal units known colloquially as “words”. I’m not sure of the technical term. — NOS4A2
a voice echoes outside the face rather than within it. I’ve observed enough brains to conclude neither words nor speakers exist in them, or anywhere else in the biology. — NOS4A2
I am not into linguistics, so my ideas on it would be that of a total layman's. I would think that in the primitive times when there was no language as such, people would see some events such as rain, and then whenever they see the rain, they would shout out "rang rang rang" or something like that. And then they would come to a word "rain" eventually for an example.If they have meanings, where would the meaning be located? Or how how do we explain where the meaning is? — NOS4A2
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