meaning
noun
1B the meaning of his
remark:B significance,B sense,B signification,import,B gist,B thrust,B drift,
B implication,B tenor,B message,B essence,substance,B purport,B intention.
2B the word has several different
meanings:B definition,B sense,explanation,B denotation,B connotation,B interp
retation,B nuance.
3B my life has no
meaning:B value,B validity,B worth,B consequence,account,B use,B usefulness,B
 significance,B point.
4B his smile was full of
meaning:B expressiveness,B significance,eloquence,B implications,B insinuatio
ns.
adjective
If it reflects some meaning in one's mind, why not? Art does not
ask much more than that.

Armando baeza

________________________________
From: Tom McCormack <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Thursday, October 25, 2012 1:20 PM
Subject: Re: "The problem with
Hegelbs aesthetics is the assumption that the truth of a work of art emerges
completely via its conceptual
 
Please delete the posting that came from me a
minute ago. My wandering thumb
accidentally hit 'enter'.



Kate writes:



"I
think I needB  you to explain clearly why it is that if the only way you can
see a painting is because it has a physical existence the physical existence
has nothing to do with the meaning. How do you propose to establish the
meaning if you don't look at the painting?B  It is clear that the physical
existence of a book is not the same as its

meaning, but the physical
existence of a lot of paint on canvas would seem a
little different."



I'm
woefully aware that the hardest thing about my position to explain is that
it's an error to assume that a painting, poem, play, dance or ANYTHINGB  "has
a
meaning".



I don't question that, when we contemplate such things, notions
arise in our
minds.B  And I realize how often we are all inclined to call
those notions "the
meaning for me".B  And we then tend to feel it's obvious we
"got the meaning"
from the object. "Where else could it have come from?" From
which it follows
the object "must have that meaning", otherwise it couldn't
give us that
meaning.



But I claim that what comes into our mind is solely
bits of memory we've
associated with the object during past experience (the
object could be
something we're seeing, it could be a word-sound, etc).
Consider: If I say
Lincoln to you where else except your memory could the
various flooding
notions come from?



Granted, we tend to say the likes of,
"The word 'milk' means this white
stuff." But if I say "milk" to you, why does
what comes to your mind differ
from the meager flickers that would come to a
shepherd in the Andes? Don't
say, "It's because the shepherd hasn't learned
the meaning of the word." If
you think about it, that's simply saying the
shepherd has no associated
memories with the sound "milk".



If someone says,
"The word Taliban has come to mean" he is, in philosophical
terms,
overreaching. What the speaker has in mind is that many people in the
West
like him will retrieve similar dire memories associated with that word.
Those
"thoughts" will be quite different from the ones that come to locals in
the
north of Afghanistan.



Picasso may have had fierce thoughts when he was
painting "Guernica", but what
thoughts the painting occasions in millions of
other contemplators will depend
on their own receiving apparatuses (some may
be color blind) and
experience-memories.



When you say, " How do you propose
to establish THE MEANING if you don't look
at the painting?B  It is clear that
the physical existence of a book is not the
same as ITS

MEANING" it is glumly
clear to me that you think an object "has a meaning",
that you think there are
two distinct entities out thereB  the object and "its
meaning". No. All of
what you call "meanings" are (varying) mental entities
inside heads.B 
Paintings do not have mental entities inside their frames.

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