It's a nod to Saussure — Count Timothy von Icarus
From the definitions you posted yourself. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I have found Merriam to be good, especially unabridged, but some deterioration over the years. — TonesInDeepFreeze
It is a misspelt word. It has nothing to do with syntax. — Lionino
Are the words in correct case, inflection, etc.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
English has no morphological cases. — Lionino
I didn't say 'morphological cases'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I am not reading them. — Lionino
But you are. Right now. Anyway, my posting is not based on whether you read or don't read. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I don't understand that. — Lionino
every sentence is grammatical. Not every sentence is grammatically correct. — Lionino
Oh, please! Talk about inane nitpicking that isn't even correct! Obviously I'm using 'grammatical' in the sense of 'grammatically correct'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You insist on the most innane nitpicks on when it comes to mathematical and logical language. — Lionino
Yes, I should have verified who you were referring to. — TonesInDeepFreeze
So, unlikely as it seems, you apparently don't know what "rules" means, or "language" for that matter.
— tim wood
What an actual dolt, my lord. Learn your own language first so foreigners don't have to teach it to you. — Lionino
But your point reduces to the tautological: the mind can't operate rationally without operating rationally. No one disagrees with that. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Moreover, even that point is not required, since we know that people do break laws of thought — TonesInDeepFreeze
if there is a single law of logic that can be broken, and that law of logic corresponds with a law of thought, then there is a law of thought that can be broken — TonesInDeepFreeze
I'm not talking about guessing what post was quoted. — TonesInDeepFreeze
"Jack is happy" is grammatical even when the speaker misused the word 'happy' while thinking it meant 'doleful'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Are you saying the poster's sentence is not adequate English? — TonesInDeepFreeze
People operate mentally in all kinds of ways: Fictionally, absurdly, poetically, ironically, day dreaming, dreaming, mystically and insanely. — TonesInDeepFreeze
This is how the French makes it into English sources. — Count Timothy von Icarus
totally divorcing meaning from authorial intent and context. And this move was given an almost political connotation, a "freeing of the sign." — Count Timothy von Icarus
D’après la distinction signification / sens classique, la signification concernerait le signe pris hors contexte et le sens ce même signe considéré en tant qu’élément d’un texte — https://www.linguistiquefrancaise.org/articles/cmlf/pdf/2008/01/cmlf08174.pdf
But your point reduces to the tautological: the mind can't operate rationally without operating rationally. No one disagrees with that.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I am aware of that. The tautology therefore is about law of thought, not about laws of logic, a different concept, thus it does not follow that laws of logic are unbreakable. — Lionino
Moreover, even that point is not required, since we know that people do break laws of thought
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Do I have to repeat my definition, which, if anything, is quite the appropriate definition? — Lionino
if there is a single law of logic that can be broken, and that law of logic corresponds with a law of thought, then there is a law of thought that can be broken
— TonesInDeepFreeze
If the law of logic is understood as expressing a law of thought — which in modern days that is not how it is understood — Lionino
hence my original comment to Leontiskos —, by definition it can't. If law of logic is understood as how we understand it today, laws of thought do not correspond to laws of logic because, as we have agreed, the latter may not be respected by some system, they may only allude to or be based on laws of thought. — Lionino
I'm not talking about guessing what post was quoted.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I am. You constantly [emphasis added] mistake what post is being quoted. — Lionino
"Jack is happy" is grammatical even when the speaker misused the word 'happy' while thinking it meant 'doleful'.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I have refuted that already. Talking of circles. — Lionino
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