Comment by Zarathruster
7 hours ago
> This makes no sense. You could equally make the statement that thought is by definition an abstract and strictly syntactic construct - one that has no objective reality.
No.
I could jam a yardstick into the ground and tell you that it's now a sundial calculating the time of day. Is this really, objectively true? Of course not. It's true to me, because I deem it so, but this is not a fact of the universe. If I drop dead, all meaning attributed to this yardstick is lost.
Now, thoughts. At the moment I'm visualizing a banana. This is objectively true: in my mind's eye, there it is. I'm not shuffling symbols around. I'm not pondering the abstract notion of bananas, I'm experiencing the concretion of one specific imaginary banana. There is no "depends on how you look at it." There's nothing to debate.
> There's also no "magic" involved in transmuting syntax into semantics, merely a subjective observer applying semantics to it.
There's no "magic" because this isn't a thing. You can't transmute syntax into semantics any more than you can transmute the knowledge of Algebra into the sensation of a cool breeze on a hot summer day. This is a category error.
> There is no "depends on how you look at it." There's nothing to debate.
None of what you wrote is remotely relevant to what I wrote.
> There's no "magic" because this isn't a thing. You can't transmute syntax into semantics any more than you can transmute the knowledge of Algebra into the sensation of a cool breeze on a hot summer day. This is a category error.
We "transmute" syntax into semantics every time we interpret a given syntax as having semantics.
There is no inherent semantics. Semantics is a function of the meaning we assign to a given syntax.
> None of what you wrote is remotely relevant to what I wrote.
You made no arguments, only vacuous assertions. In the absence of anything nontrivial to respond to, I have to assume what a better version of your post might argue.
> We "transmute" syntax into semantics every time we interpret a given syntax as having semantics.
Transmutation is the act of converting one thing into another [1]. Syntax is the structure of words or logical units [2], and semantics are meaning [3]. Your words, strung together, are ill-formed. You'll find it hard to argue much of anything when you don't understand what words mean.
[1] https://www.dictionary.com/browse/transmute
[2] https://www.dictionary.com/browse/syntax
[3] https://www.dictionary.com/browse/semantics