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Language as a Tool System

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It is common knowledge that language can be used as a tool to accomplish tasks. But utterances are taken to be constituted as encodings of mental contents. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Language as a Tool System


1
Language as a Tool System
  • Mark H. Bickhard
  • mark_at_bickhard.name
  • http//www.bickhard.ws/

2
Language as a Tool System
  • Abstract
  • It is common knowledge that language can be used
    as a tool to accomplish tasks.
  • But utterances are taken to be constituted as
    encodings of mental contents.
  • I argue that this encoding view is in error, and
    that language is directly constituted as a tool
    system.
  • In particular, utterances are tools for engaging
    the common understandings that constitute social
    realities.

3
Doing Things with Words
  • J.L. Austin was an early investigator of actions
    performed with words, e.g., assertions, commands,
    promises, etc.
  • Searle is one contemporary who has followed in
    this path
  • Others also focused on actions using words, such
    as the later Wittgensteins likening of language
    to a tool box

4
Actions with Encodings
  • All of these approaches have in common the
    assumption that the actions are performed with
    encoded propositions
  • These propositions represent states of affairs
    that are asserted to exist, commanded to be
    brought into existence, promised, and so on.
  • The encoded representations are used in the
    service of the actions

5
Problems with Encodings
  • But such encoding assumptions encounter serious
    problems
  • The problem is not that encodings do not exist
    they clearly do
  • But they cannot serve primary epistemic functions

6
Encoded Representations
  • Consider how actual encodings work
  • Example Morse code
  • ... encodes S
  • Example Neutrino counts encode properties of
    fusion processes in the sun
  • Encodings change the form of representation
  • This can be useful
  • can be sent over telegraph wires while s
    cannot
  • Neutrinos can be counted on earth, while fusion
    in the sun is not accessible

7
Encodings are Derivative
  • Encodings must borrow their representational
    content
  • They are derivative representations, not primary
  • Some agent must know represent both ends of
    the encoding relationship, and the relationship
    itself.

8
Encodings Cannot be the Basic Form of Epistemic
Access
  • Consequence encodings cannot cross epistemic
    boundaries they cannot be the primary form of
    representation for perception or for language
  • Not mind to world in perception
  • Nor world to mind in language
  • Because both ends must already be represented,
    the epistemic boundary would have to be already
    crossed in order for the encoding to exist
  • There is no way in which such non-derivative
    encodings could be defined or learned

9
Circularities
  • Circularities result from assuming that encodings
    can serve as their own ground, can provide their
    own representational content
  • Incoherence
  • Piagets copy argument
  • Classical radical skeptical argument

10
Encodingism
  • Nevertheless, the assumption that representation
    is encoding is common
  • Encodingism The assumption that (all)
    representation is encoding
  • Representation, including mental representation,
    is presumed to be constituted in some kind of
    encoding correspondence
  • causal, nomological, informational, conventional

11
Fatal Problems
  • Such encodingism assumptions, however, encounter
    myriads of fatal problems
  • Circularities
  • Too many correspondences
  • Possibility of error
  • Possibility of system detectable error
  • Possibility of emergence
  • Innatism is not a solution

12
What Could Language Be If Not Encodings?
  • Apperception
  • Other side of visually perceived object
  • Animal in forest on basis of sound
  • Modifies representation of environment
  • Adds, subtracts, transforms
  • Apperceptive maintenance of representation of
    environment around you, including extended
    environment
  • Anticipations of what could happen, what would be
    possible

13
Apperceptions of Utterances
  • Utterances induce apperceptions of
    representations
  • Apperceptions add, subtract, transform
  • Utterances operate on, transform, representations
  • Utterances interact
  • With what?

14
The Locus of Language
  • What is the locus of language interactions?
  • Obvious candidate other minds
  • Partially correct, but this overlooks the
    sociality of language
  • What about, e.g., the difference between
    arranging for someone to see that X is the case
    and telling them that X is the case?
  • Both have mind as object interactive locus
    but the first is not language
  • In the second case, the result is a
    transformation of the common understanding
    between the utterer and the audience both end up
    knowing that X was asserted, and knowing that
    both know that X was asserted, etc.

15
Situation Conventions
  • Commonalities of understanding which I call
    situation conventions, conventions about the
    current social situation constitute social
    realities
  • E.g, lecture situation, birthday party, formal
    meeting, etc.

16
Utterances as Operators
  • Utterances transform situation conventions, in
    multiple ways, at multiple scales
  • Macro e.g., call a meeting to order
  • Micro e.g., change the manner in which a pronoun
    will be resolved in a conversation

17
What About Minds?
  • Situation conventions are constituted in
    relations of commonality and consistency among
    the representations of social participants
  • So, transforming situation conventions does
    transform minds, but indirectly
  • Lifting a coffee cup is interacting with the
    atoms in the cup, but indirectly

18
Productivity
  • Signals can transform social understandings
  • Language provides a means for constructing
    unbounded ranges of operators on social
    understandings
  • Language is productive

19
Language as a Tool System
  • Language is a conventional recursive tool kit for
    constructing conventional tools (utterances) for
    interacting with situation conventions

20
Context Dependence
  • One strong consequence Language is inherently
    context dependent
  • Utterances transform the context in which they
    are uttered, and therefore are sensitive to that
    context.
  • Operators are sensitive to their arguments
  • Unless they are akin to constant functions

21
Ubiquitous Context Dependencies
  • Not just for pronouns, indexicals, etc.
  • Even proper names
  • This is obvious, but has tended to be overlooked
    in favor of the model of language as encoded
    Names
  • Recursive context dependencies
  • Partee The man who gave his paycheck to his
    wife was wiser than the man who gave it to his
    mistress.
  • Not co-referential

22
What Happened to the Propositions?
  • Utterances are interactions with representational
    systems
  • They are not representational themselves
  • Representations are generated by utterances, not
    encoded by them
  • There are no encoded propositions wrapped up in
    utterances

23
Many Further Consequences
  • An interactive model of language has many further
    consequences
  • Syntax, Semantics, Pragmatics cannot be defined
    in standard ways
  • These do not constitute a theory neutral division
    of the field of study
  • Functional constraints on syntax generates UG
  • Provides an approach to creative language
  • Utterances do not encode transformations either
  • Apperception can yield problem solving tasks

24
Conclusion
  • Utterances as actions using encoded propositions
    suffers serious logical problems
  • Language as a tool system for interacting with
    social realities avoids these problems
  • And induces multiple changes in
    conceptualizations of language and its properties
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