Chapter 5. Language, listening, and commitment

5.1 Listening in a background

p 54-55
Sentences have literal meaning. —Searle, "Literal meaning" (1979), p. 117

5.2 Meaning, commitment, and speech acts

5.3 Objectivity and tradition

p 61

Analogy of roads and terrain.
But the actual placement [of roads] depends on who wants to get vehicles of what kind from where to where, for reasons that transcend geography.

5.4 Recurrence and formalization

p 68
We believe that water is H2O and the Napoleon was the Emperor of France not because we have relevant experience but because somebody told us.

5.5 Breakdown, language, and existence

p 68

Nothing exists except through language.

p 69

It is often remarked that Eskimos have a large number of distinctions for forms of snow. This is not just because they see a lot of snow (we see many things we don't bother talking about), but precisely because there are recurrent activities with spaces of potential breakdowns for which the distinctions are relevant.

Part I, 4. Cognition as a biological phenomenon 6. Towards a new orientation,
Marc Girod