The Post Linguistic Turn

Wayfarer May 18, 2023 at 00:23 9525 views 57 comments
Freshly-published essay on Aeon The post-linguistic turn.

'Analytic and continental philosophers were once united in their obsession with language. But now new questions have arisen.'

Useful essay in providing a thumbnail sketch of the analytic-contential divide, why 'ordinary language' philosophy came to prominence and some of the names associated with it. Concludes that the linguistic turn might have had its day. :scream: I'm not posting it so much for discussion, although that is of course welcome, but because it's a very handy Mod Phil 101 type of essay - wish I'd been familiar with the names in it, before joining!

Comments (57)

jgill May 18, 2023 at 05:09 #808716
An interesting read. Recent discussions on TPF about definitions at the beginnings of philosophical arguments needing to be precise or left in some wobbly state demonstrate the tendency of the discipline to subside into the babbling of an academic brook.

We seem to be more concerned right now about whether we’re living in a virtual reality than whether we’re living in a text.


Speculations in science - even science fantasy - become a more attractive if not reasonable intellectual adventure than parsing sentences.
Jamal May 18, 2023 at 08:39 #808748
I was disappointed that it didn't actually describe any “post-linguistic turn,” didn't elaborate on the statement in the subheading that “new questions have arisen”--except to very briefly mention environmental issues and virtual reality--and didn't say anything about the basis on which the linguistic turn is being overcome. I was hoping it would go into the return of metaphysics in both analytic and continental philosophy.

Also, note that it ignores phenomenology, existentialism, and critical theory, which were concerned much more with experience, life, and society than with language. On the other hand, I guess maybe that by 1967, post-structuralism had become dominant, and represented a rejection of those philosophies.
waarala May 18, 2023 at 09:46 #808752
Quoting Jamal
Also, note that it ignores phenomenology, existentialism, and critical theory, which were concerned much more with life and society than with language. On the other hand, I guess maybe that by 1967, post-...


The 'original' Husserlian phenomenology in fact was much concerned with language. Husserl's Logical Investigations was mostly about the difference between signification and intuition i.e. meanings or expressions vs. intuitive-perceptual comprehension or 'fulfillment' of the sense. Derrida's grammatological semiology or general 'graphology' is a critique of these thoughts (combined with the critique of modern linguistics and its 'phonocentrism'). Derrida in fact criticized structuralist semiology for which everything was analogical to the language as the modern linguistics saw it?
Jamal May 18, 2023 at 10:19 #808755
Quoting waarala
The 'original' Husserlian phenomenology in fact w a s concerned with language. Husserl's Logical Investigations was mostly about the difference between signification and intuition i.e. meanings or expressions vs. intuitive-perceptual comprehension or 'fulfillment' of the sense.


Good point, although in the same book he does say that he wants to get away from “mere words” and “back to the things themselves.” That’s not to say that getting away from “mere words” is to get away from language as such, or that the things themselves are necessarily pre-linguistic, but maybe it does show that his concerns were wider than just language.
waarala May 18, 2023 at 11:14 #808758
Reply to Jamal

Yes, somewhere Husserl speaks about 'parallelity' of these. He is obviously striving for a true identity. Adequate relation between meanings and object or thing itself (Gegendstand). He is conscious of all the problems and challenges involved here though. 'Mere meanings' are at least an existing fact. And the n o n-attainment of the fulfillment of the sense is a 'normal case' too.
universeness May 18, 2023 at 11:47 #808763
Quoting Jamal
.” That’s not to say that getting away from “mere words”


An interesting development is the ability of AI to learn new languages, very quickly.

There is the example of AI, 'trained,' via all available fmri (Functional magnetic resonance imaging) scans done on human brains.
If an fmri scan is done on hungry humans, then the exact same bits of the brain 'light up' in every human to indicate that they are hungry.
Recent AI testing has been done, whereby, a human looks at say a photo of a giraffe and an fmri of their brain is taken. The fmri scan is then fed into the AI system, which then tries to reproduce the image, by analysing the fmri scan, based on it's stored knowledge base. The results have been quite spectacular.

So if such an AI system was fitted with a technology, that could scan all the brains in a room of humans, it could reproduce quite a lot of their thoughts.
In time, AI will be able to read your mind, is the projected capability. I just find it fascinating that fmri scans, could be turned into a new language.

If we have some future version of Elon Musk's neuralink type tech/physical input port, connected to our brains, could we store a future AI system on it that can scan other peoples minds, and tell us what they are thinking.
A possible future route to human telepathy? :gasp:
According to the Tristan Harris and Asa Raskin video I posted in one of my own recent threads, the ability of AI to reproduce a good representation of a photo, a human is looking at, via an fmri scan of their brain state at the time, is currently a viable system. The system can also produce a textual or even simulated verbal description of the photo the human is looking at, without the AI 'seeing' the photo directly.
Jamal May 18, 2023 at 11:54 #808766
Reply to universeness Impressive.
universeness May 18, 2023 at 12:12 #808770
Reply to Jamal
Most impressive! But let's not go all Star Wars again, or my next words HAVE to be

'but you are not a Jedi yet!' :zip:
wonderer1 May 18, 2023 at 12:51 #808778
Recent AI testing has been done...
Reply to universeness

Even more recent...

https://www.eedesignit.com/oh-no-ai-now-reads-minds/
universeness May 18, 2023 at 13:03 #808780
Reply to wonderer1
An interesting article thanks! I wonder how long protections such as:

The researchers addressed questions about the potential misuse of the technology. Decoding worked only with cooperative participants who had participated willingly in training the decoder. If the decoder had not been trained, results were unintelligible, and if participants on whom the decoder had been trained later resisted or thought other thoughts, results were also unusable.

will last!
Joshs May 18, 2023 at 16:46 #808829
Reply to Wayfarer

Quoting Wayfarer
Concludes that the linguistic turn might have had its day. :scream:


He reaches this conclusion only in the last couple paragraphs, with no justification other than that , yes, there is a real material world outside our our discursive schemes.So that ‘s what this superficial piece is about. It caricatures a wealth of recent philosophy as examples of a ‘linguistic turn’ , which it misreads as semiological structuralism, and then sets up this straw man for demolition.

It is just one more addition to the slag heap of reactionary philosophy thinking that it has spied a way ‘beyond’ postmodernism , poststructuralism and any other ism that seems to want to swalllow up the real world within our schemes. We’ve already seen similar claims, first by the New Philosophers in France , and more recently by the New Materialists, Speculative Realists and Object Oriented Ontology. These are not a step forward but a regressive move backward. In order to go beyond a way of thinking, you first have to demonstrate a proper understanding of it.
Tom Storm May 18, 2023 at 21:00 #808876
Quoting Joshs
These are not a step forward but a regressive move backward. In order to go beyond a way of thinking, you first have to demonstrate a proper understanding of it.


Do you think there's a serious attempt at understanding and he got it wrong or do you think that other factors may be at play (deliberate misreading, etc)?
Wayfarer May 18, 2023 at 21:43 #808883
Quoting Joshs
In order to go beyond a way of thinking, you first have to demonstrate a proper understanding of it.


Fair enough. What I got from the essay was an overview of the origin and significance of the focus on language as constituting a large proportion of philosophy. I hadn’t really been aware of that emphasis when I started posting on forums.
wonderer1 May 18, 2023 at 22:39 #808903
"In order to go beyond a way of thinking, you first have to demonstrate a proper understanding of it."
Reply to Joshs

This seems to me a prima facie false statement. Do you have an argument for it?

Do I need a "proper understanding" of ancient Greek cosmology in order to go beyond it? What does "proper understanding" even mean in such a case? Or to ask it another way, did Einstein need a proper understanding of luminiferous aether to go beyond it?

No offense intended, but your statement strikes me as something a member of a priesthood might say, in an attempt to cow anyone who might suggest it might be reasonable to dismiss the priesthood's theobabble.


"An interesting article thanks! I wonder how long protections such as:

The researchers addressed questions about the potential misuse of the technology. Decoding worked only with cooperative participants who had participated willingly in training the decoder. If the decoder had not been trained, results were unintelligible, and if participants on whom the decoder had been trained later resisted or thought other thoughts, results were also unusable.

will last!" Reply to universeness

Speaking as an electrical engineer, with a long time interest in the uniqueness of brains, I'm quite confident that without the AI having been trained on a specific individual's brain, the AI would not be able to decode that individual's linguistic thought.

However, in cases where a more advanced AI:
1) had been trained to decode a specific individual's thoughts
2) had the ability to provide input to the individual (spoken word, images, video, etc.) in an attempt to 'interrogate' the individual's thinking
...I wouldn't be too confident that the individual would be able to thoroughly prevent the AI from learning something that the individual didn't want known.

Joshs May 18, 2023 at 23:16 #808917
Reply to wonderer1

Quoting wonderer1
This seems to me a prima facie false statement. Do you have an argument for it?



Here is the author’s key contention:

“In the new millennium, to take one example of the transformed terrain, environmental issues came to be central in a way that seemed to render linguistic constructionism irrelevant or seemed simply to suggest its falsity. Though discourse has many roles in helping create carbon emissions, for example, it’s the material interactions of particles, whether known or unknown to anyone, narrated or not, that is the heart of the problem. Any philosophy that seemed to undermine the reality of the natural world, or make it a malleable human artefact, has come to feel potentially destructive. Indeed, scholars’ obsession with linguistic interpretation, their notion that everyone has always experienced the world as though reading a book, came to seem at a certain point to be an artefact of privilege, as well as fundamentally implausible.“

The writer’s claim here is not based on empirical fact , from which vantage he could render linguistic constructivism “false”, as he suggests, but a philosophical presupposition. He is wedded to a form of realism and this colors his reading of a variety of authors as ‘undermining reality’. Of course , postmodern authors are also operating out of a set of presuppositions , but at least they don’t fool themselves into believing this dispute is a matter of what is true or false. It is a clash of worldviews.

Quoting wonderer1
No offense intended, but your statement strikes me as something a member of a priesthood might say, in an attempt to cow anyone who might suggest it might be reasonable to dismiss the priesthood's theobabble.


No offense taken, I’ve heard this line many times. It’s kind of a standard meme among those hostile to postmodern philosophies. Authors like Derrida , Focault and Deleuze supposedly use a deliberately obscurantist style to create a cult of personalty and a horde of blindly unquestioning devotees.
That does t fly with me. I’ve studied these authors for years. It’s very hard work, but rewarding due to the brilliance and originality of their ideas. Perhaps the babbling you’re hearing is a result of your tone deafness to unfamiliar paths of thinking.


Paine May 18, 2023 at 23:53 #808923
Reply to Wayfarer
The article assumes a divide between language and the study of what exists which ignores how the problem of language has always been central to the concerns of philosophers.

In Plato's Cratylus, there is the conclusion that names are not natural products but the result of a lot of talking. In Phaedrus, the introduction ot text is said to leave out an important dimension of live dialogue. The validity of arguments throughout the dialogues generates more questions than they answer.

Aristotle's development of logic and how it collides with the processes he wants to understand in 'the world of the becoming' is the central task of his Metaphysics. A lot of his style of criticism involves having statements cancel each other out.

Hegel's Logic is, in one sense, a grammar. It is like Aristotle's Metaphysics in the way it specifies the use of words.

I could go on in this vein but want to avoid becoming tiresome.

As a result, I think the 'history of philosophy' view that we are in a place is dubious.

.
Wayfarer May 19, 2023 at 00:14 #808929
Quoting Paine
The article assumes a divide between language and the study of what exists which ignores how the problem of language has always been central to the concerns of philosophers.


I didn't post it as an authoritative reference, but as a useful sketch of how 'the linguistic turn' assumed such prominence in 20th century philosophical discourse. I myself feel from my many years of participation in forums that the restriction of the scope of philosophy to what can be clearly stated is often a way of dodging important philosophical concerns.
Banno May 19, 2023 at 00:17 #808931
Quoting Wayfarer
Concludes that the linguistic turn might have had its day.


If so, then only because it is by now ubiquitous.

By finishing his account of analytic philosophy on Rorty and Goodman, Sartwell leans overly towards an antirealism that is only a minority view. The notion captured in the opening quote "There is nothing outside the text", is not representative of analytic philosophy.

Paine May 19, 2023 at 00:28 #808933
Reply to Wayfarer
I did not mean to put words in your mouth. I hear what you are saying about the limits of definitive statements. I am wondering how that activity is specific to a problem we are having now seen side by side with people having the problem at other times.
Wayfarer May 19, 2023 at 01:00 #808939
Reply to Banno Even though my knowledge is sketchy, I'm more drawn to European than Anglo philosophy on the whole. I really don't like the Oxbridge types.

Quoting Paine
I am wondering how that activity is specific to a problem we are having now seen side by side with people having the problem at other times.


Very interesting question. Other historic epochs had, as it were, very different worlds. Perhaps you could say different 'meaning worlds' - that is, the background understanding was so different that the same words carried very different meanings. Which is something that I think today's realist epistemologies can't accomodate.
Tom Storm May 19, 2023 at 01:13 #808943
Reply to Wayfarer I have never understood how exactly words are meant to map onto reality. Is it a map-territory relation issue? People like Rorty, I believe, hold that language is not reality, but it is used by us to construct a reality - truth then is just about language doing something, but never involves a reality outside of this or, by implication, outside of us. Do words even point to reality? All of this is elementary Saussurean structuralism, I guess, but I have no good answer to these matters. You?
Wayfarer May 19, 2023 at 01:21 #808944
Reply to Tom Storm Me? No, not particularly. There are elements I've picked up from here and various other forums. I'm interested in the subject of how predication relates to universals, and the ontological status of abstract objects such as number. I'm also interested in biosemiosis since Apokrisis came along. As said, I've never warmed to the 'ordinary language' approach characteristic of analytic philosophy. It's jejune.
wonderer1 May 19, 2023 at 02:28 #808953
Perhaps the babbling you’re hearing is a result of your tone deafness to unfamiliar paths of thinking.
Reply to Joshs

Nope that wouldn't be it. I'm autistic, and a bit savantish, and quite familiar with unfamiliar paths of thinking. Paths of thinking that don't involve words among them. ;-)
Tom Storm May 19, 2023 at 02:31 #808955
Quoting wonderer1
and a bit savantish,


Isn't that like being a bit pregnant? Sorry - couldn't help it... :wink:
wonderer1 May 19, 2023 at 02:39 #808958
Isn't that like being a bit pregnant? Sorry - couldn't help it... :wink:
2 minutes ago
Reply to Tom Storm

Well... There have been many times when it has been a bit like there was something big inside me that I wanted to push out, but the linear structure of language provided a painfully narrow orifice through which to do so. So maybe so. ;)
Tom Storm May 19, 2023 at 02:43 #808959
Reply to wonderer1 I know the feeling. :cool:

Banno May 19, 2023 at 03:39 #808964
Reply to Wayfarer Then it is a disparity that, on the increasingly rare occasions of your putting together an argument, your predominant method is analytic.
Wayfarer May 19, 2023 at 03:40 #808965
Reply to Banno Why thanks, kind of.
ssu May 23, 2023 at 18:01 #810171
Reply to Wayfarer If there would be logic to this, wouldn't the "post-post philosophy" simply be the old philosophy again, in some developed form?

And we are no longer a planet awash in newsprint, but a world of imagery and image-text hybrids of sorts not covered in the Tractatus. We seem to be more concerned right now about whether we’re living in a virtual reality than whether we’re living in a text. That all sorts of new questions have arisen, however, demands new reflection, but also makes possible new histories. As Hegel observed, you can’t really tell the story of something until it starts winding down.

This feels a bit shallow. Or the familiar cry of "Our time now is so unique, that old things don't cover it".

But then again I'm not a professional philosopher.
Ciceronianus May 25, 2023 at 21:21 #810681
Quoting Banno
Concludes that the linguistic turn might have had its day.
— Wayfarer

If so, then only because it is by now ubiquitous.


Well, not entirely so, I fear.

I think the methods of analytic philosophy and OLP are useful and will remain with us as long as efforts are made to speak, write and think carefully and critically in an effort to curb, or perhaps discipline, the results of our efforts to obtain special insight merely by a kind of deep, intuitive consideration of things, ideas and concepts in abstract and without context, i.e. thinking about something really hard (contemplation).

Pretty cool, eh?
Banno May 25, 2023 at 22:16 #810696
Reply to Ciceronianus If you like. There's distinctions between anaytic, linguistic and ordinary language philosophy that remain unconsidered. But your approach would also fit Reply to Wayfarer's love-hate relationship with analytic approaches. It remains that the Sartwell article erroneously suggests that analytic philosophy is somehow antirealist.
Wayfarer May 25, 2023 at 22:19 #810698
Quoting Banno
But your approach would also fit ?Wayfarer's love-hate relationship with analytic approaches.


'Analytic' is a method, not a philosophical stance per se. As you know, I frequently cite Thomas Nagel, as he's regarded an exemplary analytic philosopher and is one who expresses what I consider an important philosophical critique of scientific materialism. I believe there are many others who follow an analytic method in defense of the kinds of philosophical views that I'm supportive of (Richard Swinburne and Jerrod Katz come to mind, although I haven't read either of them yet.) Whereas the 'ordinary language' philosophers tend to have some characteristic meta-philosophical attitudes.
Banno May 25, 2023 at 22:21 #810700
Reply to Wayfarer So analytic method is different to linguistic method?
Wayfarer May 25, 2023 at 22:29 #810704
Reply to Banno 'Ordinary language' philosophy is not, so far as I understand, a form of linguistics. Ordinary language philosophy wants to illuminate philosophical problems and concepts by examining how language is used in everyday situations, in order to promote clarity and dissolve misunderstandings that may arise from philosophical speculation and abstraction - hence its rejection of for instance idealism and metaphysics. But you can have analytic philosophers that explore metaphysical questions - such as those I mentioned.

//although when I read that essay again, it tends to merge them. In re-reading that essay, I'm less impressed, in light of the criticisms offered above, although still learned a few things from it.
Banno May 25, 2023 at 22:47 #810714
Reply to Wayfarer I'm glad you understand that. Sartwell, in presenting such a sweeping history in a few hundred words, does not make such distinctions.

Contrary to the thrust of Sartwell's essay, Antirealism is not typical of recent philosophy.
Wayfarer May 25, 2023 at 22:55 #810717
Reply to Banno I am proudly dissident from the mainstream (although I think 'anti-realism' is an unsatisfactory description.)
frank May 25, 2023 at 22:56 #810719
Reply to Banno
Ontological anti-realism is basically skepticism about any sort of resolution to metaphysical questions. It's pretty common.
Banno May 25, 2023 at 22:56 #810720
Reply to Wayfarer My critique is of Sartwell, not of you.
Banno May 25, 2023 at 22:58 #810723
Quoting frank
It's pretty common.

Can you offer any support for this?
Banno May 25, 2023 at 23:00 #810724
https://survey2020.philpeople.org/survey/results/5082
Wayfarer May 25, 2023 at 23:05 #810735
Quoting Banno
My critique is of Sartwell, not of you.


Yes, point taken. As I said, on second reading, it wasn't a terribly impressive essay, but what I got from it was a better sense of where the ordinary language philosophers fit in the scheme of things - something which I hadn't really appreciated up until now.

I often reflect on the 180 degree difference between what realism meant in traditional philosophy - realism concerning universals - and what it means now - realism concerning objects of experience.
frank May 25, 2023 at 23:12 #810736
Quoting Banno
Can you offer any support for this?


Skepticism about metaphysics has been popular since Wittgenstein.

Ontological anti-realism

The author explains the spectrum of anti-realist positions.
Banno May 25, 2023 at 23:15 #810737
I've settled on the use of realism for views that hold there to be things that are true and yet unknown. This is both an ontological view and a choice of language use. Making a clear distinction between belief and truth strikes me as the better way to talk. Antirealism does not make this distinction clear.

It's come up in several places just recently. In Statements are true? a few folk are advocating a pragmatic antirealism; in Do people value truth? the issue is making the distinction between truth and belief clear.

Banno May 25, 2023 at 23:17 #810740
Reply to frank Sure, there are various positions. The issue here is that Sartwell would have us think that antirealism is a consensus in analytic philosophy. It isn't; quite the opposite.
frank May 25, 2023 at 23:24 #810742
Quoting Banno
Sure, there are various positions. The issue here is that Sartwell would have us think that antirealism is a consensus in analytic philosophy. It isn't; quite the opposite.


Ontological anti-realism is common. The kind of anti-realism you're talking about probably isn't.
Moliere May 25, 2023 at 23:26 #810744
Reply to frank Common for whom?

I don't know the domain you mean.
Banno May 25, 2023 at 23:27 #810745
Reply to frank Can you explain to me how "ontological antirealism" differs from what you think I am talking about. I'm not seeing it.
frank May 25, 2023 at 23:27 #810746
Quoting Banno
Can you explain to me how ontological antirealism differs from what you think I am talking about. I'm not seeing it.


Glance over the essay.
frank May 25, 2023 at 23:28 #810747
Quoting Moliere
Common for whom?

I don't know the domain you mean.


Analytical philosophers
Banno May 25, 2023 at 23:29 #810748
Reply to frank :roll:

Not seeing it. My conclusion is that you have misunderstood something in the notion of antirealism.
Moliere May 25, 2023 at 23:35 #810749
Reply to frank

Is this a misunderstanding between "common" and "consensus"?

It's been more than a minute since I read Chalmers, but even on the 2nd page:


An intermediate sort of lightweight realism has also developed, holding that while there are
objective answers to ontological questions, these answers are somehow shallow or trivial, perhaps reflecting conceptual truths rather than the furniture of the world. Deflationary views of this sort have been developed by Hirsch (1993; this volume), Thomasson (this volume), Wright and Hale (2001; this volume), and others. These views contrast with what we might call the heavyweight realism of Fine, Sider, van Inwagen, and others, according to which answers to ontological questions are highly nontrivial, and reflect the ultimate furniture of the world


Which would support the notion that there's no consensus.

But "common", as in held by some prominent persons, sure.
Paine May 25, 2023 at 23:44 #810752
Reply to Banno
That survey is an interesting demonstration of the limits of classification. All those "anti-realisms" have the barest of connections to each other.
But I like the way it splits the bias toward how it is presented as a "consensus' depending upon how the thesis is put forward.
Banno May 25, 2023 at 23:48 #810754
Reply to Paine They are interesting results.

All I am using them for here is to show that, in contrast to the contention of the article mentioned in the OP, there is not a consensus in philosophy that favours antirealism. It takes Goodman and Rorty as exemplars of analytic philosophy, which is misleading.
Wayfarer May 25, 2023 at 23:53 #810755
I was interested to notice that 38% of the respondents accepted the reality of abstract objects (platonic realism). If that is included in the results for 'realism', then.....
frank May 26, 2023 at 00:00 #810756
Quoting Moliere
Is this a misunderstanding between "common" and "consensus"?


Has there ever been any kind of consensus among any sort of philosophers for the last 2400 years. :razz:
Paine May 26, 2023 at 00:29 #810764
Reply to Banno
I am not versed in Goodman but we share enough admiration for Nussbaum to see she works with Rorty's questions while challenging his premises in other discussions.

I would like to frame the discussion in terms of histories of philosophy and how much a point of view is dependent upon that framework but it is a tortured draft for the time being. One cannot say analytic philosophers attempted to avoid that ground completely while the other team did not.

For that reason, I object to the 'movement' criteria because it elides the difference between what the thinkers are saying.
.
Banno May 26, 2023 at 00:43 #810770
Reply to Wayfarer That's addressed in the correlations section further down.