In a way, the species' evolutionary history and intertwinement with language DOES get metaphysical- pace academics and a host of theories revolving around "semiotics" or "information theory" or simply the "metaphysics of biology" or "what it means to be a human". — schopenhauer1
This may not have any bearing on the OP. — frank
States of affairs have the same form as thoughts. — frank
If you're worried about metaphysics, you're trying to do something with language that it's not capable of. — frank
So if not in appearance, where are to we to find the similar form? — J
Yes. It's a secret that it's all nonsense. — frank
Well, but this is what I'm contesting. Even on the most generous interpretation of "form," a cat sitting on a mat doesn't look remotely similar to any thought or linguistic expression. — J
Possible but unlikely. Do you believe that Witt himself succeeded in demonstrating this? — J
Non-sense in what way? There's several senses to non-sense. — schopenhauer1
It would be like the knight on a chess board describing the game of chess. It can't have that vantage point. — frank
So is evolution and the development of the universe also be off the table even though we don't have those vantage points? — schopenhauer1
Metaphysics is different because it's talking about the whole world. — frank
So when someone refers to the "Metaphysics of X", and it's only part of the world, that is not metaphysics? — schopenhauer1
That would be an application of an overarching ontology to X. — frank
Language is for talking about things in the world, like evolution or cosmology. — frank
It would be like the knight on a chess board describing the game of chess. It can't have that vantage point. — frank
Agreed, but just about no one mistakes the statement for the state of affairs. But you know this, so I realize there's something I'm not understanding here. Expand? — J
SO how does a state of affairs differ from that which a statement sets out? — Banno
Sounds like a performative contradiction to me! Can't get out of statements! — schopenhauer1
The statement describes or names a particular situation in the world. This is done using words. What I'm calling a "particular situation in the world" (aka "state of affairs") is non-linguistic. — J
I don't even think you can get "sitting on" to be isomorphic, since the words don't do anything like that; one merely precedes the other. — J
Yet evolution and history of the universe are things we cannot have a vantage point about. — schopenhauer1
1. They could. I forget who this was -- LW? Sellars? I don't know -- but someone pointed out that you could write
cat
mat
for "The cat is on the mat". — Srap Tasmaner
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