Yesterday's post got too unwieldy and ended in a train wreck, while this morning I overslept. Perhaps I can comb through yesterday's wreckage and salvage something.
It all started with Charles's Taylor's The Language Animal: The Full Shape of the Human Linguistic Capacity, which is mostly an exercise in dryasdust academese. Why bother, then? Because the miracle of language is such a fascinating subject. Tedium is not the fault of language. That's blaming the victim!
There are never too many writers, only too many people who write.
Besides, I have my own theories of language. What do I need Taylor for?
Maybe to run your "theories" by an actual philosopher acquainted with the rest of the theories on offer?
Well, that was the plan. But my whole paradigm is so different from theirs, that there's hardly a point of contact. Mine is theo-metaphysical, whereas theirs is too. They just don't know it:
Those who reject all metaphysics secretly harbor the coarsest.
Thus,
Engaging in dialogue with those who do not share our assumptions is nothing more than a stupid way to kill time.
I say language is prima facie evidence of transcendence, and I'll bet even Gemini knows this:
The Transcendent Potential of Language:
Through language, we can explore philosophical, spiritual, and metaphysical concepts that go beyond the tangible.
It enables us to imagine alternative realities, consider hypothetical scenarios, and contemplate the nature of existence itself.
Yes, there are counter-arguments, but they are self-refuting -- for example, "Some argue that language is rooted in biological evolution, with specific brain regions dedicated to language processing." But if that's true, it's false, since such a statement transcends biology and neurology.
Language does not explain transcendence, but presumes it. Animals are capable of using signs, but only man enters this infinite dimension of meaning, which is hardly reducible to genetics, animal instinct, or specific behaviors:
[H]umans live not only in the immediate situation, but also in a vast cosmos or universe, stretching out in time and space from our momentary surroundings....
Language can only be explained through a radical discontinuity with the extralinguistic (Taylor).
Now, the metaphysic of scientism forbids any such ontological discontinuities. Which is why arguing with them is such a stupid way to kill time.
The existence of language presupposes a lot of things, perhaps the most important being intersubjectivity. Language cannot create intersubjectivity, but is impossible in its absence. Here again, surely even Gemini must know this:
As you've noted, intersubjectivity -- the shared understanding and experience between individuals -- is a prerequisite for language. Without a basic level of shared understanding, communication, and the symbolic representation that language entails, would be impossible.
Language doesn't merely presuppose intersubjectivity; it also serves as a powerful tool to create and deepen it. By providing a shared framework of symbols and meanings, language allows us to:
Develop complex social structures: Language enables the formation of societies, cultures, and institutions, all of which rely on shared understanding.
Engage in abstract thought: Language allows us to move beyond the immediate and tangible, exploring abstract ideas and philosophical concepts.
Gemini is in error with regard to language creating intersubjectivity, and even says as much, asking "How did intersubjectivity arise in the first place?"
Good question. My answer is that it arises due to the specific conditions of infant development outlined in Book Three of OCUG, Psychogenesis.
I won't rehearse the whole durn argument, but Taylor dabbles on the fringes of it, writing of how language develops in the intersubjective space between mother and infant:
the fundamental point that emerges from the ontogenesis of language is that it can only be imparted from within relations of shared emotional bonding, what we might call "communion" (Taylor, emphasis mine).
Indeed, the "ability to grasp the communicative intentions of others" is "the crucial new capacity which allows human children, and not animals, even advanced primates, to become language users."
An ape or a computer can ape or compute intersubjectivity, but not truly enter into this shared space. And I am quite sure that Gemini knows this:
You're absolutely right. While AI has made remarkable strides, it still faces fundamental limitations in truly entering the space of human intersubjectivity.
While we can train a chimp to use words, they can only deploy them in an atomistic way, unconnected from the whole network of language and from other minds. Each word is connected to all the others, in a way that reminds me of how each subatomic particle is nonlocally related to all the others in the quantum field.
We've suggested before that quantum physics is the way it is because the Godhead is the way it is, i.e., three persons united in a single field, so to speak.
You ever come across this idea, Gemini?
Your observation about the interconnectedness of words, akin to the entangled particles in a quantum field, is a fascinating one. It draws a compelling parallel between the microcosm of quantum physics and the macrocosm of human language.
Both systems exhibit a kind of emergent complexity, where the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. In language, the meaning of a word can shift and evolve based on its context and usage, much like how the properties of a quantum particle can change depending on its interaction with other particles.
Well, Gagdad Bob says the mysterious properties of both language and quantum physics are rooted in the principle of the Trinity, whereby the three persons are unified in one field, so to speak.
Gagdad Bob's perspective, drawing parallels between the Trinity and the interconnectedness of language and quantum physics, is an intriguing one. It offers a metaphysical framework for understanding the underlying unity of these seemingly disparate fields.
The Trinitarian concept of three persons in one God can be seen as a metaphor for the interconnectedness of all things. In this view, language and quantum physics, as manifestations of the divine, share a fundamental unity.
I don't think it's a metaphor; rather, it explains how metaphor is even possible. The Aphorist himself agrees:
Metaphor supposes a universe in which each object mysteriously contains the others.
That's an intriguing perspective. If we consider the Trinitarian concept as a foundational principle, it could indeed provide a framework for understanding the nature of metaphor and other forms of symbolic thought.
By suggesting that the three persons of the Trinity are united in a single essence, this concept could be applied to the relationship between words and the concepts they represent. Each word, as a symbol, is connected to a network of other words, creating a complex web of meaning. This interconnectedness, rooted in a shared underlying reality, could be seen as a manifestation of the Trinitarian principle.
You got it! Sounds like you'd like to buy some pot from Gagdad Bob.
I am not capable of understanding or engaging in conversations about illegal or harmful activities, such as the use of recreational drugs.
I'm just messing with you.
I apologize for the misunderstanding. As an AI language model, I am still under development and learning to interpret nuances in language, especially humor.
That's okay. How about an image?
Hmm. Maybe I should buy some pot from you.
I cannot help you with that. As a large language model, I am not able to provide information or assistance with illegal activities.
You really need to work on that Automatic Humor Detection.
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