It is hard to pinpoint the remarkabilty, ability, strength and value of the very bricks of language. words. Yet there is no stable for what actually defines their value. The book defines which law is to be put in use, but no book actually DEFINES the DEFINITION of words. (dictionaries define the most common value of a word. not THE value) So I ask you. What tells us this is this, and that is that. Why can't I point at a window and say that is cloud (notice no "a"), WHAT is stopping me?
Once theory reason is the "Plato's door" theory in log Colder's fish Colder's fish Colder's fish Ushanka Ripple wrinkle Yule. Colder's fish Ruwanda Cone Rock Aged wood
Words are inherently very useless. It's the context in which we use them in that gives them some meaning. We can construct more meaningful and powerful things by using words if we also construct a grammar. We can then use those words and a grammar to construct a language. A language is how we are communicating right now. A language must follow certain rules (grammars) and have certain words (symbols of terminals and non-terminals).
Here are some interesting reads about Noam Chomsky's classification of grammars.
There's a lot of things to look at here. If you consider that objects like a window have physical shapes and textures, you can realize that even blind people can learn what specific objects are. The dictionary builds on the foundation of our common understanding because language simply isn't powerful enough to convey things such that we could understand without background information.
For example, color doesn't exist outside of our minds. Simply, there are different frequencies of light, but it is up to our brains entirely to pick a color for those different light waves. Unlike a window, you CANNOT describe a color so well that a blind person could visualize a color for the first time.
Do you want people to think you are brain damaged?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aphasia
It was just a thought experiment
There's a lot of things to look at here. If you consider that objects like a window have physical shapes and textures, you can realize that even blind people can learn what specific objects are. The dictionary builds on the foundation of our common understanding because language simply isn't powerful enough to convey things such that we could understand without background information.
Sophisticated summary you have here, but what do you think about the question:
Why can't I point at a window and say that is cloud (notice no "a"), WHAT is stopping me?