FalloutJack said:
Just because you teach Kryten from Red Dwarf to lie about a banana doesn't mean the banana has changed.
True, now think about what that actually means..
I.e. it is possible for Kryten calls the banana an orange, and yet
the object itself is unaffected.
That's because the word "banana" is not in and of itself the object, it is an arbitrary sign which
signifies an object. In fact, depending on whether we use a two or three part semiotics, the word "banana" may not even directly signify the object banana at all, but rather the signified concept of a banana (hence why "cats are fluffy" is a true statement despite the fact that not all cats are fluffy).
The nature of the object does not bend in accordance with language.. you've correctly noticed this yourself, and yet you haven't followed it through the logical implication that there is nothing inherently "banana-like" about the banana. The universe does not care if you call it an orange, or a aeroplane, or whatever made up word you want. Jesus Christ is not going to teleport in to slap you for trying to change the immutable laws of the universe by doing so. What this means is that language is not in and of itself reality, it is a tool for
describing reality which is created by and only of use to human beings.
We don't have to dismantle the entire history of Western philosophy to see that language can be an imperfect tool. It's actually incredibly obvious that language and the categorizations it imposes are often fairly arbitrary.
This raises a lot of questions which it becomes necessary to answer if we're going to try and talk about the world. It creates an epistemological responsibility to justify the language we use, not simply to assume it's okay because hey, people use these words and people have never been wrong about anything!
mike1921 said:
I hope I'm missing some context that makes it clear you're talking about people with deformed genitals or something, not that the decision is arbitrary in the average birth and that fringe cases where someone doesn't fit into a certain sex make sex not exist.
No. The decision is always arbitrary
Some people have lobed ears. Some people have unlobed ears. That's a real physical difference which exists. But if someone started dividing babies into social categories and expecting them to function and behave differently based on whether or not they had lobed or unlobed ears, you'd presumably say.. "what the fuck, dude, that is arbitrary" because it is.
Bodies exist. They have a substantive physical reality which is not something I'm seeking to question. The meaning which is assigned to them, however, does not.
If you want to try another thought excercise, imagine a universe in which there is and has only ever been one human being, drifting alone in space.
This human being has a penis.
Is it male?