The meaning of a name is not the thing that it names - even if the name is dog. The meaning of any word can only be the way we use it. So we use the word dog to talk about the things we call dogs - real things that exist, that we know about, and that we can describe.RCSaunders wrote: ↑Wed May 20, 2020 7:25 pmConcepts are not, "entities," like physical objects or substances. Do you deny their existence because they have no physical properties?Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Wed May 20, 2020 4:22 pmWtf? We use language in order to know and think things? Arse-about-face nonsense. As you say: we have to know something before it can be communicated, and think it before it can be written or spoken. So the purpose of language isn't to know and think things. What are you on about?RCSaunders wrote: ↑Wed May 20, 2020 3:14 pm
The primary purpose of language is not communication. The purpose of language is knowledge and thinking. One must know something before it can be communicated and must think it before it can be written or spoken.
Words are not concepts, they are only symbols witch represent concepts. On their own, no symbol means anything. It is only the concepts words or symbols represent that have meaning and what they mean is the actual existents they refer to.
Your three beliefs about language are what is wrong with all of epistemology corrupted by logical positivists and linguistic analysis.
For anyone interested in the true meaning of words and concepts, see, "Epistemology, Concepts."
And what and where is a concept? Metaphysical claptrap.
In a recent post, you use the words, "opinion," "obey," "critIcal," "objective," "assertions," "irrelevant," and "antithesis." What and were is/are opinions, obedience, objectivity, assertions, relevance, or the antithetical. What physical properties do any of them have? They certainly don't exist physically, so how do they exist? Concepts are the same kind of existents as those terms you use exist.
Only some of the words I used are abstract nouns. Others are verbs and adjectives. Do you think those are the names of concepts? And if you think the abstract nouns are the names of concepts - what and where are those concepts? And in what way do they exist?
If you can't answer these questions - which, of course, you can't - please ask yourself why not. We've suckered ourselves with the myth of abstract things, the nomenclaturist view of meaning, and mentalist dualism, for so long that it's hard to recognise the delusion and wake up.