GE Morton wrote: ↑February 21st, 2020, 8:38 pm
Of course I can. If I ask you to point out the dog in a photo
Do you think you don't have to interpret what I'm pointing to?
(And aren't you familiar with Quine's
Word and Object, by the way?)
Now you seem to be contradicting yourself. Yes, the way you will know whether Alfie's meanings are consistent with yours are by observing his behavior, including his uses of words. You need know nothing about what is in his head.
Right, because I can not know what's in his head. What I do is
assign meanings in my head. If the observables start to not make sense with the meanings I assign in my head, then I either revise the meanings I'm assigning, or depending on just what I'm observing, I figure that the other person is inscrutable for some reason--as has already happened at least once on this board since I've been posting here, and has happened many times on other boards I've posted on.
Then you need to explain how such consistency can happen,
Via our interpretive abilities and the fact that the world, including others' behavior, doesn't seem to be random.
how meanings can be so readily shared,
I've said nothing at all about meanings being shared. They're not.
if meanings are things in people's heads. After all, the number of possible meanings people could attach to any given word is infinite.
It's a very large number at least, sure.
Absent some common source for your understanding of the meaning of "dog" and Alfie's, consistency between you would be miraculous.
Not at all. Again, it's about how we interpret things. We don't assign meanings randomly, and what we observe isn't random. You're commenting as if any aspect of this would be random. "Either meaning are public and we can observe them or meaning ascription is random" is a false dichotomy.