'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.




Wednesday, November 05, 2014

Philosophical Grammar 27


27. The names I give to bodies, shapes, colours, lengths have different grammars in each case. The meaning of a name is not the thing we point to when we give an ostensive definition of the name.



grammar as a way or method of describing the place and function of words in a particular linguistic construction –

and from this the development of general principles

grammar is a means of understanding language as a construction

an ostensive definition does not point to meaning –

ostensive definition – makes a logical focus for meaning –

meaning as recognition –

and here I use one of any number of possible characterizations

we cannot be definitive regarding meaning

as with any definition –

we operate with proposals – propositions –

open to question – open to doubt – uncertain

language flows –

logically and empirically –

our understanding of language –

and the concepts it generates i.e. meaning

cannot be fixed



© greg t. charlton. 2014.