Like all objects, words reflect a meaning to the brain.
mando
On Nov 5, 2008, at 9:24 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Geoff, you say:
"you still assert that our minds do the meaning-finding, BUT in
everyday talk, words mean something."
The upper-case BUT is mine, to emphasize you evidently see a
difference.
Please articulate why you feel the WORDS do the "meaning" as
distinguished from
just our minds, contemplating them, and making associations with
the familiar
sound/scription. Please take into account my repeated asserted
that words are
inert, they don't act, any more than a rock does.
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