'For the person or persons that hold dominion, can no more combine with the keeping up of majesty the running with harlots drunk or naked about the streets, or the performances of a stage player, or the open violation or contempt of laws passed by themselves than they can combine existence with non-existence'.

- Benedict de Spinoza. Political Treatise. 1677.




Sunday, October 26, 2014

Philosophical Grammar 2



2. Understanding and signs. Frege against the formalists. Understanding like seeing a picture that makes all the rules clear; in that case the picture is itself a sign, a calculus.

“To understand a language” – to take a symbolism as a whole.

Language must speak for itself.



seeing a picture that makes all the rules clear – is not seeing the possibilities of the picture

seeing the possibilities of a picture – is understanding the picture

yes – the picture is a sign – and as with any sign – open to question – open to doubt

to understand a language is to engage with it – to recognize its possibilities

language must speak for itself –

and what language says – when language speaks for itself – is whatever it is said to say



© greg t. charlton. 2014.