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To What Extent Does The Nature Of

Language Illuminate Our Understanding Of The Relation Between Knowledge Of Ourselves And Knowledge Of Others? Essay, Research Paper


To What Extent Does the Nature of Language Illuminate Our Understanding of the


Relation Between Knowledge of Ourselves and Knowledge of Others?


More than any other thing, the use of language sets humankind apart from the


remainder of the animal kingdom. There is some debate as to where the actual


boundary between language and communication should be drawn, however there seems


to be no debate as to the nature of Language, which is to communicate, using


abstract symbols, the workings of one mind to one or more others with a


relatively high degree of accuracy. It could perhaps be said that we are all


capable of expressing or representing our thoughts in a manner that is only


meaningful to ourselves. Wittgenstein says that ?..a wheel that can be turned


though nothing else moves with it is not part of the mechanism.?1 The idea of


a uniquely personal language is not relevant here and so will not be discussed


further.


Language is a system of symbols which represent thoughts, perceptions and a


multitude of other mental events. Although the meaning of a given word or


expression is by no means fixed, there is a sufficiently high degree of


consensus in most cases to ensure that our thoughts are to a great extent


communicable. This essay will concentrate on two aspects of language. Firstly


that it gives our own thoughts and those of others a certain degree of


portability and secondly that because it has a firm (though not rigid) set of


rules governing the relationships between symbols it allows what would otherwise


be internal concepts that could not be generalised, to be made explicit,


examined in detail and compared.


If we did not have language we would be able to surmise very little about other


humans around us. Non-verbal communication has evolved to instantaneously


communicate ones’ emotional state, and generally succeeds in this, however


although it can reveal what a person may be feeling at a particular time, it


says nothing about why those feelings are present and in any case is most


reliable with strong emotions such as anger, fear, disgust &c. The less intense


the emotion the more vaguely it is portrayed. If we are aware of the events


preceeding the display of emotion we may be able to attribute a cause to it, but


as psychologists Jones and Nisbett (1972) showed, these attributions are quite


likely to be inaccurate due to the predilection that humans have for attributing


behaviour to the disposition of the person being observed. In addition to all


of this, non-verbal communication is limited to observers in the immediate area


at the time of the behaviour.


In contrast to this, language allows us to group ideas and perceptions together


and compare them in order to reach a high degree of consensus about their


meaning. Wittgenstein says that ?You learned the concept ?pain’ when you


learned language.?2 The portability that language imparts to thoughts and


perceptions allows us to compare our own response to various experienced stimuli


with anothers’ report of their response to a similar event which we may or may


not have witnessed. Over time it becomes possible to discern certain trends and


so, for example, the sensation that we feel when we strike our thumbs with a


hammer, the characteristic ?pain behaviour? and such things as the anguish that


people feel at the end of a romantic liaison all become part of the general


concept of pain, even though they are all dissimilar in form (this point will


be discussed subsequently). By using language humans can vicariously partake of


the experiences of another (e.g. when one watches a play or a film or when one


listens to an account of a friends experience.) In short, language allows us


to make comparisons between our own thought processes and those of others which


in turn enables us to infer that the subjective experience of others is in many


cases similar to our own.


An important property of language is that it has rules governing the


relationships between its’ constituent parts. Some of these rules are more


rigid than others which gives the system con

siderable overall flexibility. For


instance, there is a great difference between saying “You are not allowed to do


it.? and ?You are allowed not to do it.”


This is a crude example but it makes the point that the meaning of an utterance


depends upon more than just the words used. In addition an utterance may be


meaningful, and grammatically valid and still be nonsense, For instance the


sentence; ?An Elephant is a fish in wellingtons? The meaning of the sentence


is perfectly clear and the rules of grammar have hopefully been obeyed, but the


sentence itself is patently untrue.


The analysis of sense and meaning is carried out using Logic, the study of


argument and inference. Logical analysis of an utterance can establish the


validity, or non-validity of any assertions that it makes. To use the oft-


quoted example; ?All men are mortal and Socrates is a man.? One may infer from


these statements that Socrates is mortal, since there is no combination of


circumstances in which they could simultaneously be true and Socrates immortal.


One major contribution that logic makes to the understanding of the difference


between ourselves and others is that it can identify assumptions that are


commonly made when speaking of others. For instance, to continue the pain


example, If one sees a person exhibiting pain behaviour one is apt to think; ?


That person is in pain.? but it is impossible for one to actually know what


they are feeling. To a greater or lesser degree one infers that the others’


actual experience mirrors ones’ own to the same degree that their behaviour does.


In the same vein, if I see my best friend slip with a screwdriver for instance,


and injure his hand, I could reasonably say that I know him to be in pain, given


that long experience has not shown any great difference between his apparent


response to injury and my own. However I could not make the same statement


about myself with any real meaning for the simple reason that my own experience


of pain transcends knowledge. In my own case it makes as much, or as little


sense to say that I doubt that I am in pain as it does to say that I know that I


am.


Language therefore can be said to be something of a two-edged sword when


referring to an understanding of the differences between knowledge of the self


and knowledge of another. One the one hand the ability to ask questions of the


type; ?What do you mean by ……?? can allow some insight into the thought


processes underlying the behaviour of another. On the other hand an analysis of


the differences between what is actually being said when a statement is made


referring to another and the same statement made referring to oneself, can show


that ultimately ones’ knowledge of oneself and ones’ knowledge of others are two


fundamentally different things. Knowledge of self is based on priviliged


information that, in the absence of telepathic communication, is only available


to oneself. This does not mean to say that our knowledge of ourselves is either


accurate or complete. Human beings are generally highly proficient at self-


deception, nontheless a word, a sentence, a series of sentences can only be an


approximation of the thoughts behind them, likewise when words impact upon our


consciousness, they are subject to interpretation. The purpose of language is


to communicate but as Huxley says; ?By its’ very nature every embodied spirit


is doomed to suffer and enjoy in solitude. Sensations, feelings, insights,


fancies – all these are private and, except through symbols and at second hand,


incommunicable. We can pool information about experiences, but never the


experiences themselves. From family to nation every human group is a society of


island universes.?


REFERENCES


1) Wittgenstein. L. 1995. Philosophical Investigations. 271.


2) ibid. 384.


3) Huxley. A. 1954. The Doors of Perception. pp3-4.


BIBLIOGRAPHY


Hume. D. 1985. A Treatise of human nature. Penguin.


Huxley. A. 1994. The Doors of Perception. Flamingo.


O’Hear. A. 1985. What philosophy is. Penguin.


Putnam. H. 1975. Mind Language and Reality. Cambridge University Press.


Wittgenstein. L. 1995. Philosophical Investigations. Blackwell.

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