Thanks, Frances. Realize that if he takes it a premise that "meaning" and 
"meanings" are "objective entities in the outer world", my position will be 
that 
he is assuming the very question at hand. The huge majority of philosophers do 
that. They say, "Words MEAN," (or "Words have meanings"), and they take their 
question as, "How do they do it?" My position is that words are, so to speak, 
inert ink on paper. 'To mean' is a verb. Words don't "mean", because they 
don't act. The mind, contemplating a word, summons up previous ASSOCIATIONS 
with 
the sound or scription.   The word 'carrots' was constantly associated with an 
experience of that vegetable, so when someone hears 'carrot' the image etc of 
the vegetable comes to mind. Understandably, we tend to say, "That's the 
word's meaning for me." Which implies it's solely notional. 


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