Terrapin Station wrote: ↑February 24th, 2020, 10:10 am
Peter Holmes wrote: ↑February 24th, 2020, 9:15 am
Do you think the abstract noun meaning is the name of a thing of some kind.
Yes. (Isn't that what I just said?)
Okay. And that's where, in my view, the problem starts. Your argument here has been about what and where that supposed thing is. If it's not a thing of any kind, then what and where that thing is - inside or outside brains - is no longer an issue.
Do you think that thing exists in the way that real things exist
Meaning is a mental (brain) state.
I'm reminded of Wittgenstein's joke about opening up someone's head - nowadays we'd use a brain scan - and trying to find thoughts, feelings, intentions - you'd add meanings - and other so-called mental things and events - things such as concepts or ideas. Category error, or what?
Re "real" and "exist," I don't know if you're using "real" in the traditional philosophical sense (so that it refers to extramental things), and "exist" has often been used similarity. You'd have to clarify that.
I'm asking if you use the words 'thing' and 'exist', without equivocation, to talk about what you call mental things and events. Brain states - electrochemical processes - are real and exist, of course.
And if you think meaning exists, what is it and where does it exist?
Again, it's a mental, or a brain state. Brains are in heads, of course.
The word 'mental' comes from 'mind'. If you think that what we call the mind is nothing more than, say, a dynamic brain state, it's multiplying entities and terms unnecessarily - and confusingly - to talk about mental states. And it's fooled you (us) into saying meaning is a thing that exists or goes on 'in the mind'.
That this nonsense of the mental and the extramental still passes muster amazes me.
That it's considered nonsense stumps me. It's a very obvious, simple distinction. It's basically like saying brains versus things that aren't brains. You don't think that's nonsense, do you?
Of course not. Both brains and things that aren't brains are real things. But what and where are minds and mental states - such as thoughts and meanings? I'm just pointing out the delusion of thinking they're real things that exist, in some way, 'in' 'minds', in the way that brains exist in our skulls.
When we abandon reifying talk about fictional abstract things, such as meaning, we can free ourselves from the delusion that such things are identical to or different from anything.
Just what do you take abstracts to be, by the way? (I had asked you this before, more or less, and I didn't see you answer.)
My quarry is supposed abstract things - knowledge, truth, justice, identity, meaning, causation, being, and so on - the whole absurd catalogue of supposed things that metaphysical philosophers have been arguing about for centuries - as though abstract nouns are the names of things of some kind that somehow exist somewhere, and that we can describe. Your belief that meaning is such a thing demonstrates the delusion at work.
Denotational and extensional meaning are subsets of the non-existent thing we call meaning. See above.
Presumably you'd say that meaning is non-existent, but that there is meaning? What would meaning be other than existent then?
Meaning, like other invented abstract things, doesn't 'exist' in the way that brains and electrochemical processes exist. If your answer is that meaning does exist, and that it's a brain state, then that's a category error. Examine any brain state or electrochemical process, and there won't be a menaing in sight, or a thought, or a feeling, or an intention, and so on, and so on.
You're stuck with the metaphysical delusion that there's an abstract place - the mind - in which abstract things exist and abstract events occur.
Mind isn't abstract. Mind is identical to a subset of brain states. There's nothing abstract about that.
Mind can perform abstractions, but as such, those abstractions are concrete, particular things that minds (subsets of brain states) do.
There's no such thing as an "abstract place."
Couldn't agree more - just as there's no such thing as an abstract thing, such as meaning, in that non-existent abstract place we call 'the mind'.
We use the word 'meaning' and its cognates perfectly clearly all the time, in many different contexts.
I'm not sure why you're introducing this.
I was reacting to your claim that, if meanings aren't mental things that exist in minds, there are no such things. I was just pointing out the fact - as Wittgenstein did tirelessly - that, metaphysical confusion notwithstanding, we talk about meanings all the time, oblivious to philosophical contortions.
If by 'mental state' you mean 'brain state', then don't bother with mental states and the distinction between the mental and the extramental.
No idea what you're saying here, exactly.
Sorry. An analogy. If someone says 'God is the universe', it saves time and effort to forget about 'God' and just talk about the universe.
But then, why is meaning a brain state? More metphysical delusion.
That's like asking why eruptions are volcano states. It's simply something that volcanoes do, it's a property they have.
With meaning, there doesn't appear to be anything else that can do the task at hand. Nothing else seems to have the relevant properties. Brains do.
And here's the rub. Volcanoes and eruptions are real things, with an explicable, demonstrable causal connection - though it would be odd to say that volcanoes 'do' eruptions.
The analogy with brains and meanings is hopeless.