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9 Meaning, Understanding, and Use

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The Psychological Theory of Communication ... end of language in communication being to be understood, words ... The Institutional Theory of Communication ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 9 Meaning, Understanding, and Use


1
9Meaning, Understanding, and Use
2
  • We are so much accustomed to communication
    through language, in conversation, that it looks
    to us as if the whole point of communication lay
    in this someone else grasps the sense of my
    wordswhich is something mental he as it were
    takes it into his own mind. If he then does
    something further with it as well, that is no
    part of the immediate purpose of language. (PI
    363)

3
  • This picture is reinforced by the fact that signs
    are arbitrary and conventional.
  • If we replace p by t in chap we end up
    with another sign with a different meaning, but
    it is arbitrary that we should employ one word
    instead of the other to signify such and such.
  • chat in English has a different meaning than
    in French. It seems that a signs meaning is
    given by what goes on in the mind when it is
    read, uttered or heard. For, by themselves sign
    are death.

4
  • Hence
  • Meaning and understanding seem to be mental
    phenomena.
  • Understanding is conceived as the underlying
    mental phenomenon of which the behaviour is a
    symptom and our access to someones understanding
    is only indirect, i.e. by inductive or analogical
    inference, while she has direct access to her
    understanding.

5
Understanding
  • Understanding as a state of the mind.
  • Notice, however, that we speak of being in a
    state of excitement, depression, joy, etc. but we
    do not speak of being in a state of loving,
    fearing, hating, etc.
  • Do we speak of being in a state of meaning,
    intending, minding?
  • Understanding is more linked to an activity than
    to a state of the mind.

6
  • If understanding and meaning are mental
    processes, experiences or states, then they
    should be accessible to introspection, like
    hearing, listening or suffering.
  • Cf. Descartes methodology.
  • What, though, is the specific quality or mental
    experience or state which understanding name?

7
  • On this approach understanding is conceived,
    like in the Augustinian picture, as a word naming
    something.
  • Besides, if understanding is a state whose
    manifestation is behaviour, then this state is
    likely to be conceived as a physico-chemical
    state of the brain (cf. Central State Materialist
    position). It is the physical state that causes
    behaviour.

8
  • Meaning and understanding are not experiences.
  • For experiences are neither necessary nor
    sufficient for understanding.
  • The criterion for understanding lie in
    performances.

9
  • Understanding is an activity.
  • Now I understand is more a signal of
    understanding which is judged to be correctly
    employed by what the pupil goes on to do, rather
    than a report of an introspective experience.

10
Meaning is Use
  • Understanding is not a mental process or state.
  • It is more linked to an activity.
  • So, understanding is an ability
  • To understand a word it to be able to use it
    correctly.
  • Meaning is use.

11
  • For any words to have meaning, or to be
    understood as having certain meanings, it must be
    used in a certain way, to do something or other.
    Sounds or marks do not possess meaning at all on
    their own. Someones meaning or understanding
    something by a certain word on a certain occasion
    could then perhaps be explained as the persons
    engaging in a certain practice or conforming to
    the way that word is used without some such
    practice the word would have no meaning at all.
    (Stroud Meaning, Understanding, and Practice,
    Oxford UP, viii-ix)

12
  • There are some interconnected central notions one
    should keep in mind when considerdeiring
    Wittgensteins motto meaning is used.
  • Form of life
  • The non-linguistic context is essential to the
    understanding linguistic activities.

13
  • To Imagine a language is to imagine a form of
    life
  • (PI, 7)
  • What has to be accepted, the given, isone could
    sayform of life.
  • (PI II, 226)

14
  • Insofar as language has foundations, they are
    provided not by metaphysical atoms, but by
    patterns of communal activity.
  • The idea that form of life provides the
    foundations of language has been elaborated in
    opposite directions.

15
  • 1. Transcendental reading
  • Grammar is an integral part of human practice.
    So it is subject to change.

16
  • 2. Naturalistic reading
  • Form of life is part of our human nature which
    determines how we act and react.
  • But Wittgensteins naturalism is anthropological
    rather than biological for the natural history is
    the history of cultural, language-using
    individuals.

17
  • Language game
  • There are many different games and there is a
    family resemblance between them.

18
  • The notion of a game allows to highlight the
    facts that games must be played, that there are
    rules which must be followed, etc.
  • That one must engage in the game.
  • Our language games are embedded in our form of
    life, the overall practice of a linguistic
    community.

19
  • Like any other game, language games are played
    in a setting.
  • Even if the setting is not involved in the
    explanation of the meaning of a given expression,
    is nevertheless relevant to that expression
    having that meaning.

20
  • We learn games, how to play, etc.
  • The foundation of our learning is training.
  • Language games are not subject to justification
    they are rooted in our natural reactions and
    activities.

21
Wittgensteins anti-reductionism
  • An ability is distinct from its vehicle.
  • E.g. whisky can intoxicate (ability) because of
    the alcohol it contains (vehicle) but the alcohol
    is not identical with the intoxicating power.

22
  • One can weight the alcohol but not the ability
    to intoxicate.
  • So if an ability is distinct from its vehicle,
    it is distinct from the structure of its vehicle
    which may explain the ability.

23
  • Hence it is misguiding to think that we can
    reduce power to the structure of its vehicle.
  • E.g. sugar is soluble, but solubility
    (disposition) is not a state of sugar.
  • The same for psychological dispositions being
    able to speak French, like being clever,
    charming, etc., is not a state of a person.

24
  • We are not tempted to identify the horse-power of
    a car with a state of its engine although the car
    has this horse-power because of the state.
  • Why, though, are we so tempted to reduce mental
    powers with the underlying neural structure?

25
  • Moral
  • Wittgenstein reverses the traditional direction
    of fit between meaning and understanding.

26
  • While the Augustinian picture deals with
    understanding, explanation and communication
    using the concept of meaning qua correlation
    between words and objects, Wittgenstein reverses
    the order of explanation.
  • Meaning is explained using the notion of
    understanding, explaining and communications.
    Meaning reduces to use.

27
  • Concepts
  • Concepts get their meaning, i.e. their use,
    because they are embedded in a complex form of
    life that is revealed (and is the background) in
    the way speakers live and act.

28
  • Wittgenstein and Psychologism
  • Conventions play a central role in
    Wittgensteins conception of language.
  • Cf. the notion of rules and rules following.

29
  • Conventions vs. Intentions
  • Grice, Lewis, Schiffer, argue that the notion
    of convention can be analyzed in terms of the
    speakers intentions.
  • Thus linguistic conventions can be explained in
    terms of the psychological notion of intention.
  • We would hence have a psychological theory of
    meaning.

30
  • The Psychological Theory of Communication
  • Communication resumes to the transmission of
    what one has in the mind and understanding to the
    grasping of what one has in the mind, i.e. to
    grasp ones mental representation.
  • The latter need not be, pace Frege, private.

31
  • Words in their primary or immediate
    signification, stand for nothing but the ideas in
    the mind of him that uses them ... nor can anyone
    apply them as marks, immediately, to anything
    else but the ideas that he himself hath. (Locke
    1690 III.ii.2)
  • ...
  • The chief end of language in communication being
    to be understood, words serve well for that end,
    neither in civil nor philosophical discourse,
    when any word does not excite in the hearer the
    same idea which it stands for in the breast of
    the speaker. (Locke 1690 III.ix.4)

32
  • The Institutional Theory of Communication
  • It rests on the Division of Linguistic Labour
    (see Putnam 1975 The Meaning of Meaning).
  • Meanings arent in the head.
  • Mental representations do not determine what
    words stand for (reference or extension).
  • Cf. twin-Earth thought experiment.

33
  • We could hardly use such words as elm and
    aluminum if no one possessed a way of
    recognizing elm trees and aluminum metal but not
    everyone to whom the distinction is important has
    to be able to make the distinction. ... Consider
    our community as a factory in this factory
    some people have the job of wearing gold
    wedding rings, other people have the job of
    selling gold wedding rings, still other people
    have the job of telling whether or not
    something is really gold. ... everyone to whom
    gold is important for any reason has to acquire
    the word gold but he does not have to acquire
    the method of recognizing if something is or is
    not gold. He can rely on a special subclass of
    speakers. (Putnam 1975 227-8)

34
  • Direct Reference
  • Cf. causal theory, social character of
    meaning/reference,
  • Reference depends on a social causal chain.

35
  • Language
  • It is conceived as the result of a social
    interaction and cooperation.
  • The harmony between thought and reality is to
    be found in the grammar of the language.
    (Wittgenstein Philosophical Grammar 162)

36
  • Theory of meaning theory of understanding
  • (cf. Dummett)
  • A theory of meaning deals with the speakers
    mastering the language, that is, with her
    knowledge of the language.

37
  • This account can only be given in terms of the
    practical ability which the speaker displays in
    using sentences of the language and, in general,
    the knowledge of which that practical ability is
    taken as a manifestation may be, and should be,
    regarded as only implicit knowledge. (Dummett
    1978 p.101)

38
  • Knowing-how vs. knowing-that
  • The knowledge involved in the mastery of a
    language is a sort of implicit knowledge akin to
    a practical ability, a kind of knowing-how.
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