Redirected from Meaning of meaning
So let's talk about the meaning of "meaning." And so we are going to explore, for a little bit, what is called the theory of meaning. We are going to focus on linguistic meaning -- the meaning that words, sentences, and other items of language have, as well as the meaning that we human beings can have in using those items of language. Because "meaning" is, like most English words, highly ambiguous -- has lots of different senses. But when we ask what the meaning of "meaning" is, in the theory of meaning, we're asking about language or linguistic meaning.
The awful thing -- what makes the theory of meaning so difficult -- is that there are lots of different kinds linguistic meaning. So it's better to speak of the meanings, plural, of "meaning": the meanings of "meaning." Consider this example:
What is the meaning of "Barry is a bachelor."?
To use the Barry/Jerry example: when I say "Barry is a bachelor," what I mean, what I intend to say is, roughly paraphrased, that the man I met is a bachelor. But what my words mean is that the man my female friend is pointing to, a man whose name really is "Barry," is a bachelor. The speaker's meaning here is about one person, while the semantic meaning is about a different person. Usually they match up, but sometimes they don't.
Here's another example where speaker's meaning and semantic meaning don't match up.
So that's one complication that a theory of meaning has to deal with: different kinds of meaning-bearers. When we ask, "What is the meaning of 'meaning??" then you can now come back and ask, cleverly, "Do you mean the meaning of 'speaker's meaning? or the meaning of 'semantic meaning??"
Another complication are the semantic meaning-bearers -- you know, words, phrases, sentences, and so forth. As mentioned, we can speak of individual words, all by themselves, such as the word "bachelor," having meaning; we can speak of various kinds of phrases, such as "the brightest star in the sky," and "is larger than"; we can speak of the meaning of whole sentences, such as "Barry is a bachelor." The meaning of a whole sentence is clearly a different critter from the meaning of an individual word.
And then among words and phrases we can distinguish different parts of speech, such as noun phrases and adjectival phrases, and of course those are going to have different kinds of meaning. And clearly proper names, which are names that stand for individuals, like "Jerry" and "Barry," and "Paris," and "Venus," are going to have yet another kind of meaning.
See also Gottlob Frege, John Austin, Ludwig Wittgenstein
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