whitefork
None of the above
- Joined
- Aug 6, 2001
- Messages
- 2,326
Clinton took a lot of well-deserved abuse for his "meaning of 'is'" evasion, but the whole question of the nature of existence and being is certainly worth discussing.
For instance, you have two verbs in Spanish - SER and ESTAR, both meaning BE. You have Heidegger's question "How does it stand with being" that sort of ties those together (STAND from some Indo-European root that also gives us exiSTENce, BE from something like dwell, abide)
All that aside, we are meaning-creating animals, and that leads directly to signs and words. I take those to be a form of tools, myself, meaning being an attribute of things we create, physically.
So, while meaning may not exist independently of us, the objects we use to convey meaning certainly do.
What makes something a sign or symbol for something else?
For instance, you have two verbs in Spanish - SER and ESTAR, both meaning BE. You have Heidegger's question "How does it stand with being" that sort of ties those together (STAND from some Indo-European root that also gives us exiSTENce, BE from something like dwell, abide)
All that aside, we are meaning-creating animals, and that leads directly to signs and words. I take those to be a form of tools, myself, meaning being an attribute of things we create, physically.
So, while meaning may not exist independently of us, the objects we use to convey meaning certainly do.
What makes something a sign or symbol for something else?