French is a Latin language. — Arne
I don't think I missed anything. I made this comment referring to your saying "Look up the definition of a word in the dictionary. Then look up the definition of each of the words in that definition ." This is the way one can become a kind of superliterate. And I never talked about such a thing.Perhaps you missed the pivotal point. One cannot learn one's first language from a dictionary. Therefore there is a way of understanding the meanings of words that is not found in their lexical definitions. — Banno
Certainly, this can often be the case. A lot of definitions, I believe, are incomplete. But they still offer the essence, the central idea of a term, esp. for concepts, which is most important.Hence there is a sense of "meaning" that is not found in a dictionary. — Banno
Certainly yes. But again, I never claimed such a thing.It would be an error, then, to think that dictionaries provide the whole of meaning. — Banno
Also, I'm talking esp. about basic, key terms used in a subject of the discussion. And that a "speaker" who is using them has to make it clear what they mean by them and how they use them, either by giving their definition or description and/or (practical) examples of their use.
Which, in most cases, is not ... the case. :smile: — Alkis Piskas
You are referring to a kind of "constant" use of definitions in a discussion, writing or speech. And your points make sense. — Alkis Piskas
However, I have talked about basic, key terms in a duscussion. — Alkis Piskas
And that one must know what the person who is using them means with them, when this is obviously not evident. — Alkis Piskas
You can well define "capitalism" as "People selling stuff for money", if this is what capitalism means to you. If you get cricised for it, that would be a mistake. — Alkis Piskas
When one looks for the essence of something, its description is always simple. — Alkis Piskas
What are "digital marks on the internet"? E.g. emojis, icons, buttons, etc.?Our communication through digital marks on the internet. How can the use of words appear here, for example, in a digital philosophy forum? — JuanZu
Can't really get that either. Undestanding it depends of course on understanding what you described earlier.Here there are no practical examples that indicate the use of words, but, similar to a dictionary, we have to work only with marks referring to each other. — JuanZu
Yes. This is quite logical. We use it in everyday language as well, as a means to avoid a word being taken literally or in the wrong sense, esp. when it has different meanings. At least, those who care about undestanding and good communcation do it. :smile:It is very common in this context (that of philosophy) to say "I say this in this sense"), as a non-normal and non-everyday sense. — JuanZu
What are "digital marks on the internet"? E.g. emojis, icons, buttons, etc.?
Also, what dou you mean by "a digital philosophy forum"? I can think of two kinds of (any) fora: online and offline. — Alkis Piskas
Yes, those dictionaries. But also, from the writings of the philosophers themselves, which are not dictionaries themselves. Their books are filled with definitions/meanings.Philosophy has its own lexicon that's different from politics, for example. — L'éléphant
Do you refer to a particular lexicon, like a specialized dictionary or encyclopedia --e.g. Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, etc.-- or a personal vocabulary, based on their own personal meanings of terms?
If it's the first case, what Philosophy lexicon are you using? — Alkis Piskas
Yes, if you know that the term is causing a confustion. Which usually you don't or don't care about.I am just saying that my preferred solution is to phrase oneself differently and abandon the term causing confusion. — Judaka
This is a good idea.Alternatively, if it's appropriate, and for key terms it often is, then make the term's meaning the core of the debate. — Judaka
What do you mean by "can't let others"? Only a school or university teacher can do that. :smile:One can't let others define terms however they want. There are many reasons for this, but to focus on the most important one, "truth" only requires a single validation. — Judaka
You are very right about this. This is happening too often in this and other similar places (forums & communities). Evidently, the only solution for this is to realize that this is happening and just stop talking about that irrelevant, "parasitic" subject. :smile:.You can only dispute that claim by challenging the way capitalism was defined. Then the discussion becomes about "What is capitalism". — Judaka
No, there isn't. But see, because they are shared, they are public, as you say, their definition has to reflect or represent the common opinion and knowledge regarding them, as well as the basic, essential elements which they are based on.Words and terms are public, they're shared, and while they are also used for personal expression, that doesn't mean there's no right or wrong of what words refer to. — Judaka
Certainly.An argument or line of logic can be true or false depending on how the terms within those arguments are understood. — Judaka
I'm not sure if get this right. Do you consider the essence as generic? And if so, what is the "specific"?When one looks for the essence of something, its description is always simple.
— Alkis Piskas
I'll just say that I disagree, for me, the generic doesn't trump the specific. — Judaka
It is true that philosophy focuses on the essence of things. I have forgotten that. I'm talking about and practicing it by habit! :grin:Philosophy searches for "the essence" because it's big-picture, so there's no alternative, this is a nasty flaw of philosophy, not something to be celebrated or promoted. — Judaka
I see. That is, like the ink on the paper, the electrons fired on a screen, etc. And like the acoustic waves that words produce when they are uttered. Words are material symbols that can be presented in any and all of these forms.[Re: "digital marks on the internet"]You can say that they are simply pixel-marks. — JuanZu
Right, you are talking here about the known disadvantage of the written messages. This is the reason why emoticons and later emojis where created, as a substitute for the mood in which a message is transmitted. (In spoken language the problem is lesser, since we can rely on the tone and pitch of voice. But gestures and face expressions are still missing.)When I talk to you in this forum I do not see your body, nor do I hear your words, nor do I see your gestures — JuanZu
Right. But I consider empirical descriptions --i.e. examples of how a concept works in practice, in life, etc.-- quite important, since they make an abstract idea better undestandable --more concrete and more "visible" and tangible-- by giving flesh and bones to it. They also show that the person using that concept has a solid reality of it, not just a bunch of words and thoughts in his head.This is why the use of dictionaries is so useful in these contexts (such as in a philosophy forum). That is, a definition through marks is more universal and conceptual (and it is no coincidence that the concept and the universal are related, differentiating themselves from particularity and empirical limitation). — JuanZu
One cannot learn one's first language from a dictionary. Therefore there is a way of understanding the meanings of words that is not found in their lexical definitions. — Banno
One cannot learn one's first language from a dictionary. Therefore there is a way of understanding the meanings of words that is not found in their lexical definitions.
Hence there is a sense of "meaning" that is not found in a dictionary. — Banno
Of course not. What is shown is that dictionaries can only be a secondary way of understanding a word. Of much greater import is the way the word is used.Just because a child learning a language picks it up without reading a dictionary, doesn't mean that the meanings of the words the child learns are not roughly represented by what is found in a dictionary and that the definitions contained within aren't really useful. — ToothyMaw
Of much greater import is the way the word is used. — Banno
Right. But I consider empirical descriptions --i.e. examples of how a concept works in practice, in life, etc.-- quite important, since they make an abstract idea better undestandable --more concrete and more "visible" and tangible-- by giving flesh and bones to it. — Alkis Piskas
BK Kastrup is one of the main --if not the main-- supporter and defender of idealism, more precisely analytic idealism. What creteria are you using to distingusih "cult figures" from actual philosophers?Kastrup is more cult figure than philosopher. Idealism has precious few followers amongst professional philosopher. — Banno
Can you make this a little more clear to me? Do you mean that consciousness contains action?Consciousness is not just perception, but also involves acting on the world. Consciousness is not passive. — Banno
What is this way?Therefore there is a way of understanding the meanings of words that is not found in their lexical definitions. — Banno
I think that you are talking about how one uses a language in general and not esp. definitions, which is our subject. Because if one does not follow the grammar and syntax rules of one's language, this will be reflected in everything one says or writes, wouldn't it?when we read a definition in a dictionary, we are affected by its system and its specific configuration (word order, spacing, syntax, etc.) — JuanZu
But emotions are not and should not be part of or belong to definitions. I brought up "emojies" in the context of written language in general.In a dictionary there are usually no "emojis" or the facial expressions of the writer. — JuanZu
Right.Every time we apply the concept more broadly (in daily life, in practical examples, analogies, metaphors, etc.) we are doing something that is supposed to be its essence: Universality and its application to many cases at different space and time. — JuanZu
You open and leave a lot of doors open, Banno ... — Alkis Piskas
In first aid, consciousness is assessed by obtaining a reaction. Would that philosophers might learn first aid.Can you make this a little more clear to me? — Alkis Piskas
Philosophical investigations, §201 and thereabouts.What is this way? — Alkis Piskas
Can you make this a little more clear to me? Do you mean that consciousness contains action? — Alkis Piskas
I think that you are talking about how one uses a language in general and not esp. definitions, which is our subject. Because if one does not follow the grammar and syntax rules of one's language, this will be reflected in everything one says or writes, wouldn't it?
Your ideas on the subject of language sound quite original and maybe there's something really interesting and useful here. However, I admit that they are not clear to me. — Alkis Piskas
But emotions are not and should not be part of or belong to definitions. I brought up "emojies" in the context of written language in general. — Alkis Piskas
Wittgenstein's theory is incomplete without a theory of the sign. — JuanZu
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