Like I said over here, I’m using the concept of ‘meaning’ from linguistics. I’m hoping that fewer people are confused by my use of ‘meaning’ as employed in the field that studies meaning than if I had used ‘meaning’ in a more narrow and less standard way, like Wei Dai’s. Perhaps I’m wrong about that, but I’m not sure.
My comment above about how “we have to act in the world now” gives one reason why, I suspect, the linguist’s sense of ‘meaning’ includes stipulated meaning, and why stipulated meaning is so common.
In any case, I think you and Wei Dai have helped me think about how to be more clear to more people by adding such clarifications as this.
Like I said over here, I’m using the concept of ‘meaning’ from linguistics. I’m hoping that fewer people are confused by my use of ‘meaning’ as employed in the field that studies meaning than if I had used ‘meaning’ in a more narrow and less standard way, like Wei Dai’s. Perhaps I’m wrong about that, but I’m not sure.
My comment above about how “we have to act in the world now” gives one reason why, I suspect, the linguist’s sense of ‘meaning’ includes stipulated meaning, and why stipulated meaning is so common.
In any case, I think you and Wei Dai have helped me think about how to be more clear to more people by adding such clarifications as this.