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Basic concepts

Meaning, sense, and reference

Semantics studies linguistic meaning, which contrasts with other forms of meaning. For example, religion and spirituality are interested in the meaning of life, which is about the significance of existence or finding a purpose in life. Linguistic meaning, by contrast, refers to how signs are interpreted and the information they contain.[1][2][3] Linguistic meaning has itself different levels of meaning. Word meaning is studied by lexical semantics and investigates the meaning of individual words. Sentence meanings falls into the field of phrasal semantics and examines the meaning of full sentences while utterance meaning is studied by pragmatics and concerns the meaning of an expression on a particular occasion. The two come apart in cases where expressions are used in a non-literal way, as is often the case with irony. Some theorists further distinguish uttarance meaning as a public phenomenon from speaker meaning, which is a private phenomenon corresponding to what the speaker intended to state.[4][5]

Meaning is often understood as a concept that encompasses both sense and reference.[6][3] Some theorists prefer the terms intension and extension or connotation and denotation.[7]

The reference of an expression is what an expression refers to while sense is the way it refers to that object or how the object is interpreted. For example, the expressions "morning star" and "evening star" refer to the same planet, just like the expressions "2 + 2" and "3 + 1" refer to the same number. The meaning of these expressions differs not on the level of reference but on the level sense.[3]

Identity statements usually express that two expressions with a different sense have the same reference. For example, the sentence "the morning star is the evening star" is informative while the sentence "the morning star is the morning star" is a plain tautology.[8]

Sense is sometimes understood as an intermediate entity that helps people to associate linguistic expressions with the external world. According to this view, the sense of an expression corresponds to the mental phenomena in the form of concepts and ideas associated with this term. Through them, people can identify which objects it refers to. [8][9]

Some semanticists focus only on sense or only on reference in their analysis of meaning.[10][9]

To understand the meaning of an expression, it is usually necessary to understand both to what entities in the world it refers and how it describes them.[11]

The linguistic meaning of terms is often expressed in dictionary definitions that give synonymous expressions or paraphrases. For example, the term ram may be defined as an adult male sheep.[12]

Some theorists distinguish reference as the process of pointing to something from denotation as the object to which an expression points.[13]

According to one view, the meaning of an expression is the object it refers to. This view states that the meaning of the word 'bridge' are the physical structures that provide passage over a gap.[10] A different view holds that the meaning of a term are the mental phenomena, like the concepts and ideas associated with this term. [9]

meaning of lang (sense/reference) vs meaning of life (goal/purpose) significance of events actual vs ascribed significance interpretation of signs, information


Truth

Semiotic triangle

Compositionality

Others

One problem in many disciplines that study language is that language is used at the same time to express their findings. To avoid this potential confusion, semanicists frequently differentiate between object language and metalanguage. The object language is the language that is being investigated and whose meanings are studied. The metalanguage is the language employed to describe the object language. For example, dictionaries use definitions to explain the meaning of terms. In this case, the term belongs to the object language while the definition is part of the metalanguage. [14]


Meaning and use[15]


Sources

  • Marti, Genoveva (1998). Sense and Reference. Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Leach, Stephen; Tartaglia, James (11 May 2018). "Postscript: The Blue Flower". The Meaning of Life and the Great Philosophers. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-315-38592-1.
  • Abaza, Jack (16 November 2023). The Definitive Answer to the Meaning of Life. Wipf and Stock Publishers. ISBN 979-8-3852-0172-3.
  • Cunningham, D. J. (2009). "Meaning, Sense, and Reference". In Allan, Keith (ed.). Concise Encyclopedia of Semantics. Elsevier. ISBN 978-0-08-095969-6.
  1. ^ Leach & Tartaglia 2018, pp. 274–275.
  2. ^ Abaza 2023, p. 32.
  3. ^ a b c Cunningham 2009, p. 526.
  4. ^ Riemer 2010, pp. 21–22.
  5. ^ Griffiths & Cummins 2023, pp. 5–6.
  6. ^ Griffiths & Cummins 2023, pp. 7–9.
  7. ^ Cunningham 2009, p. 527.
  8. ^ a b Marti 1998, Lead Section.
  9. ^ a b c Riemer 2010, pp. 27–28.
  10. ^ a b Riemer 2010, pp. 25–26.
  11. ^ Cunningham 2009, p. 531.
  12. ^ Cunningham 2009, pp. 530–531.
  13. ^ Griffiths & Cummins 2023, pp. (7–9)?.
  14. ^ Riemer 2010, pp. 22–23.
  15. ^ Riemer 2010, p. 36.