Ars Technica , Lee Hutchinson —
We represent things in the world with words, and once you know that words represent concrete things, it's a short jump to realizing that words can represent abstract things, too. Symbolic representation isn't necessarily straightforward, either. "A philosopher named Quine had this notion," she said. "If you're out in the field with somebody, and they point and say 'Gavagai!' and you look and you see a rabbit running through the field, you assume that gavagai in their language means rabbit . But how do you know it doesn't mean 'brown,' or 'tail,' or 'leg,' or 'fur'—" "Or, 'Look at that!'" I said. "Yeah, all of this other stuff is present, but we have this whole object notion," she said. "We have a notion of what constitutes a distinct object, and we assume that the word corresponds to that whole object as a default. Would the alien have that notion?" |
See as well posts tagged Books as Objects.