He assumed the wand of authority and we can't get it back,he has  an
ability to use more words quicker  than I do. Besides, at least he has
some claim on the position. What I am saying that if he is going to do
this,then he would be better off doing it in an organized way instead
of this fretful nipping at people about whatever silly way they used a
word last.  It impedes conversation and in my case at least stops it
cold since I know  I could have done better  Of course he also coined
the phrase "talk-sounds" which through a life of hearing people talk
stupid is one of the stars.

-----Original Message-----
From: William Conger <[email protected]>
To: aesthetics-l <[email protected]>
Sent: Sat, Jan 19, 2013 4:47 pm
Subject: Re: wake up

Oh, no! You are giving Cheerskep the wand of imperial authority on word
usage.

I'm not taking instruction from him.  I will debate with him.

He'll love being appointed  master and the rest of us his pupils.

wc.



________________________________
From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Sat, January 19, 2013 3:04:40 PM
Subject: Re: wake up

Cheerskep writes:
You yourself, William,
have
remarked about how tedious it is of me to attack yet again the listers'
use
of the word "art" with no attempt whatever to describe what notion the
lister has in mind, and yet you continue regularly to use it in ways
that for
all
the world suggest you think it "has a referent" that will come to the
minds
of anyone who reads you.

  It is tedious because we seldom get to discuss anything but your
remarks on the use of whatever word it is that you object to. You would
do better not to correct every misuse of every word ,but bundle them
and their sloppy use into their respective groups  for  coherent
periodic advice to the list.  If you take the word art, and go over the
various ways you feel it has been misused and the unfortunate result on
the argument of whoever used it, you will have a more forceful
presentation on the word art.
Kate Sullivan
-----Original Message-----
From: Cheerskep <[email protected]>
To: aesthetics-l <[email protected]>
Sent: Sat, Jan 19, 2013 1:37 pm
Subject: Re: wake up

In a message dated 1/19/13 12:06:55 PM, [email protected] writes:


"When a drawn curve is said to mean hip it is simply a casual way to
say.
. . "

It's a casual way FOR WHOM to say? You're a brave man to assert what
everyone who uses the phrase has in mind.

"the
drawn line evokes an association to hip at that time in that context."

Again -- evokes FOR WHOM? One of the ingenuities of Picasso for me has
always been his ability to astonish me by his apt associating of a pair
of
images that very few others on this globe would, without prompting, see
as in
any
way "connected".

I'm not against "casual ways" of talking (I often mention "kitchen
English"), but we have to be careful with it when the conversation is
somewhat
"philosophical" -- which is what I take many of the postings on this
forum to
be.


"(And why, O why does Cheerskep repeat
the point ad-nauseum?)."

It's gratifying when I see evidence I've been persuasive about some
point
or other, but I far more often notice that no matter how many times I've
dwelt on something, very few seem to have heard me. You yourself,
William,
have
remarked about how tedious it is of me to attack yet again the listers'
use
of the word "art" with no attempt whatever to describe what notion the
lister has in mind, and yet you continue regularly to use it in ways
that for
all
the world suggest you think it "has a referent" that will come to the
minds
of anyone who reads you.


You write:

 "Words or images do not have any -- NONE-- inherent meanings or are
they
particular stable signs when isolated from a context/s.  But habit and
custom
and mental agility do constrain our awareness of contexts."

I have said repeatedly that certain words are serviceable -- words in
the
kitchen, on a ball field, on a battlefield. This is not because they
"are
stable signs" in a suitable context. Those who think of them as "stable
signs"
convince me that they think of the sound or scription as
a mind-independent entity that "has   a meaning". At any rate, they
think
of a "sign" as "signifying", doing something -- something intrinsic to
the
"sign".

But, I tediously (and fecklessly) repeat yet again, those alleged
"signs"
DO NOTHING. They are inert. They are in a crucial sense of the word
"meaningless". When the sound or scription is contemplated by an
observer, the
contemplator's brain will associate it, connect it, with other notion
in the
mind
at the same time -- concurrent new notion, remembered notion, and new
notions as we draw inferences from new connections.   This deludes us
into
imputing "meaning" to the word. The brain may then propound new notion
based
in the
brain's processing. The end result of all this processing is what I've
called a "me-meaning" -- a personal notion (that is, alas,
indeterminate,
indefinite, multiplex and transitory).

You seem to assert agreement with much of this, and yet continue to use
certain words in ways inconsistent with this. Meantime, it's not
obvious to me
that a single other lister has been persuaded by anything I've said. I
say
that not as a whine but as the primary reason I keep repeating my view
as new
postings arise that appear to be innocent of any awareness of remarks
I've
made that (claim I) are pertinent to points in the new postings.




________________________________
From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Sat, January 19, 2013 10:18:42 AM
Subject: Re: wake up

In a message dated 1/19/13 9:43:37 AM, [email protected]
writes:


> On Jan 19, 2013, at 9:28 AM, saulostrow <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Though I would suggest that depiction is a semiotic system (one of
> visual
> > signs and symbols)  and therefore linguistic.
>
Michael Brady responded:
>
> Thank you. Much more succinct than my reply.
>

I myself tend to think of it almost the other way around. A visual
artist's
one-line curve of a woman's hip reminds me directly of a real woman's
hip.
The memory of a real woman's hip is, for me, a visual memory. My
brain, on
seeing or hearing something, "retrieves" from memory quite directly:
This
one
ink-line curve on paper   "reminds me" of that real curve because of
visual
resemblance, association of like images.

I reject systems of "signs", "signifying", "symbolizing" in attempts
to
explain why the one curve retrieves for me the memory of the other.
A
photograph of Lincoln brings to mind memories of the man; it does not
do
so
because
it "signifies" or "symbolizes" or "means" him. The image in the photo
visually resembles images in my memory. The non-artist who,
confronted by
a
"schematized, abstract" painting, says to himself   "This means
shoulder,
this
means hip, this means foot. (Means = signifies)," is flatly wrong. The
imputation of "meaning" to a visual mark is a basic error.

Philosophers are particularly prone to this peculiar form of
self-delusion.
Unwilling simply to accept the simpler truth that, after repeated
juxtaposition of the sound "milk" with the white stuff,   a child's
brain
connects/associates the sound with the white stuff, many philosophers
have
devised
elaborate imaginary schemes called "denoting", "signifying",
"designating",
"meaning".

The philosophers do this despite their readily accepting that a
child, onc
e
painfully burned by a candle, immediately "associates" flame with
pain.
That smart puppy, Pavlov's dog, tried to teach philosophers that
association
is
all that goes on when we recall.

The philosophers are not consciously being dishonest. Craving a more
profound analysis (and a more intricate vocabulary suggestive of
profundity)
they
have sincerely deluded themselves into thinking that in some sense
they
"explain" the brain's ability to associate (and to recall by
retrieving
associated notions) better by saying that word-sounds "denote",
"signify",
"designate", etc. In fact the words DO nothing whatever; all the
action is
by
the
brain.

In any case, all of this about hip-curves etc remains visual for me,
not
"linguistic". In fact, I associate "linguistic" much more with aural
sensation
than visual -- but that's another matter.

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