~stacey
Thu, May 21, 1998 (23:44)
#101
Quite a lot hath transpired in a mere 24 hours.
Truly wish for a group hug.
Does anyone want to hazard a guess as to why we as a whole seem to mesh so swell. not perfectly, not seamlessly, but so well?
It reminds me of our love question... what is the attraction.
Ours is obviously not physical (or have I just missed to much by telneting??) attraction. And the apparent 'safety of anonimity' is a ruse because if we have revealed anything to one another, we have revealed our true thoughts, questions and in some cases... fears.
WFAAILYA(u?) -- warm fuzzies all around I love you all (unconditionally?)
*smile*
~KitchenManager
Fri, May 22, 1998 (00:31)
#102
roflmpaiuu
(rolling on floor laughing my philosophical ass into ultimate understanding)
~KitchenManager
Fri, May 22, 1998 (01:04)
#103
hey, does that doggerel bite harder than I bark?
~autumn
Fri, May 22, 1998 (01:14)
#104
Good question, wer...time will tell...
Stacey, I think you're right, we all deserve each other! LOLYOTVOFAATK (laughing out loud yet on the verge of falling asleep at the keyboard)
~jgross5
Fri, May 22, 1998 (01:33)
#105
.....and then along came post 101.....
I feel like one of those 9 kids in your class.
The stuff you teach in your posts
so often it's about how to get along
with real glee
--not how to get along in an instructional sense
--but just how to do it by doing it yourself
I'd totally undergo a seizure of disbelief if
any of your students, when they reach their nineties
and are lying there on their beds, as their lives are about to close
and are asked by their great-great-grandkids
if they can remember any teachers that they ever had that they liked
and they say anything else but something like:
well, Mildred, I mean Lucy, I'm sorry darlin', what's yer name again?
oh, Oota? so it is....yes, well, Oota
my memory can't get it goin' so good anymore
but one teacher stands way way WAY out
I had her in third grade, some 85 years ago
aughhh, you're making me cry, now, Oota
I'm really glad you asked me that
it turns out to be a most beautiful question
this teacher I could only wish upon you
I wish you could have had her for a whole year like me
she just did the impossible, that's all, day after day
"whatdaya mean, great-great-grandaddy?"
oh Oota, dearie, I had many dark and threatening clouds
running me down....it was a life you won't have to have, yourself, hon'
I needed an anchor, a patch of hope
or I probably would've been eaten on the spot
by my own dreaded, mixed-up despair and anger and personal demons
I felt left out in the cold by what had been happening to me, you see
and she was there in the middle of all that
she was there in the room with me and the others
she was there for me
I found out that I was actually an okay person
Oota, do you know what that can mean if it hadn't occurred to you?
it's so bewilderingly uplifting
it just makes you dumbfoundedly grateful
you get to have your heart back
and your heart drives over to your soul and
asks it if it wants a lift anywhere
my soul jumped right in and said, "hey, let's go all
the way to the end of our lives"
heart said, "no problemo, I know the way now"
I gotta tell ya something else, too, Oota
there were a few of us who really knew how to get teach goin'
we would do somethin, whatever it was, and she'd crack up
then she had this lightning quick ability to crack us all up right back
and I mean time after time after time
it could go on and on
this was the purest fun that ever came my way
and Oota, something else....Oota....
"yes, grandda.....granddad?....granddaddy?...."
just a few moments later: "Mom, granddad's eyes closed
he stopped breathing......
Mom....he had this.....a smile....he had this gentle smile, Mom"
~KitchenManager
Fri, May 22, 1998 (01:58)
#106
amen
~stacey
Fri, May 22, 1998 (16:34)
#107
the meaning I find and hope to continue finding in my job is to have an impact even a fraction of what you just described.
thank you.
~riette
Wed, May 27, 1998 (08:33)
#108
WER, finally I get a chance to respond to the things you said earlier.
I am sorry. I was wrong about you. I honestly thought you were this man who always wore a white hat, smoked alot of cigars every day, which he smelled of, and spent his nights in front of the computer with only virtual reality to keep him company, and not being able to find someone willing to counsel him. No, please don't laugh or get angry. It's just the way it was - I don't know why. But this week you were very different, so kind, and trying to help me, even though you don't like me much and all th
t. You are really alot more sensitive than I thought, and not a control freak, and therefore my response was wrong too.
I don't know what kind of women you've been dating, but you must find a different type altogether. Some people see the compromises that their partners are willing to make for them as a kind of submission, and see it as their right to control the other person. It's wrong and selfish. I think it is quite rare to find someone with whom, and who will want to be one's equal. That's the problem with love and relationships and all that. People take advantage of one another far too easily. It is a shame, b
cause being another person's equal is so much more exciting and stimulating than standing above them. There is just so much more interaction, so much energy, and, oh, just so much more going on on the whole. Those who fancy control and the false sense of power and security it creates, will always be unhappy - because just taking or just giving is no fun - and deep down he/she will know that they will never truly be esteemed and loved for what they are.
~KitchenManager
Wed, May 27, 1998 (10:02)
#109
(the control freak thing, at times, is a very correct summation)
~riette
Wed, May 27, 1998 (13:49)
#110
And now you have control over my user name . . . the very thought is making me tremble. Does that mean I have to be nice to you from now on?
~KitchenManager
Wed, May 27, 1998 (13:49)
#111
~riette
Thu, May 28, 1998 (02:18)
#112
Nah . . . I can handle you, I think. And besides, I like being so close to you . . . all those knives and forks rattling away as you speak - it gives a strangely musical ring to your voice . . .
~KitchenManager
Thu, May 28, 1998 (17:51)
#113
that's because you're in Switzerland and
aren't getting all the volume...
~riette
Thu, May 28, 1998 (19:02)
#114
Oh. Must've been a cow bell I heard then. Sorry.
~KitchenManager
Thu, May 28, 1998 (19:10)
#115
no need to be...
so, where should this here conversation go now?
~riette
Thu, May 28, 1998 (19:14)
#116
Let me think - this conversation, you mean, or should be stick to one conference, 'cos this is getting confusing!
~KitchenManager
Thu, May 28, 1998 (19:22)
#117
this conversation in this topic...
(and, actually, I need to run,
see ya later)
~riette
Thu, May 28, 1998 (19:23)
#118
Bye.
~stacey
Sat, May 30, 1998 (19:52)
#119
and the meaning in all this...
or perhaps we could really stir up the mix and discuss 'hidden' meaning.
Oh shit! Here come the worms!!!!!
~riette
Sun, May 31, 1998 (04:38)
#120
Catch them and use them for bait next time you go fishing.
The meaning?
Bullshit is what makes the world go round?
~TIM
Sun, Nov 22, 1998 (22:10)
#121
Or at least the world seems to run on it. If it doesn't make the world go round
then it's the primary lubricant on the gears.
There is so much of it produced, It has to be good for something.
~riette
Mon, Nov 23, 1998 (02:26)
#122
What gives meaning to your life, Tim?
~TIM
Mon, Nov 23, 1998 (02:54)
#123
My friends and my religion. How about you, riette?
~riette
Mon, Nov 23, 1998 (08:39)
#124
Family, dreams, the idea that there's still more to see and do, and other spiritual feelings. I am not religious in the concrete sense - but I think alot about spiritual things too. Like where I come from where I'll be going after this, and what and who God is.
Are you Catholic?
~jgross
Mon, Nov 23, 1998 (13:39)
#125
No I'm not Catholic at all.
I'm religious in the concrete sense only.
I helped Katie lay a slab of cement in the backyard where she's living.
It's gonna be the foundation for her to do welding.
She creates unusual-looking objects.
I believe they call it art or something.
But I haven't seen the slab since it was cement.
Maybe it's concrete by now.
It's been more than a week.
I think I'll venture over there by way of a weeklong pilgrimage.
I'll tiptoe the whole way, since it's only a couple miles.
The slab is sacred.
Intuitively I can already sense the visions I'll have when I arrive
there will be holy and abundant.
~TIM
Mon, Nov 23, 1998 (13:45)
#126
I was born and raised Catholic. Attended catholic schools until college. Then I
Started looking at the history of the Catholic Church and found that their
teachings fly in the face of their history. I now attend the church of Christ.
Each congregation is autonomous. There is no hierarchy. Our congregation is
wealthy, by this I mean we take in many thousand more than we need in
contributions. so we support missionaries. Currently we have two churches in
Russia, one in Italy, two on Indian reservations in this country, and one in New
Zealand. Our weekly contribution averages ten thousand dollars. and we only have
600 members.
~riette
Tue, Nov 24, 1998 (02:32)
#127
That's pretty impressive! I knew you were Catholic though! Hence the many many many siblings!
~TIM
Tue, Nov 24, 1998 (02:41)
#128
Everybody says that. My godparents only had one child, and they were catholic.
admittedly they were the exception to the rule. Right now, at afamily reunion,
limited to first cousins and their children and parents, we have over 300 people
~jgross
Tue, Nov 24, 1998 (12:53)
#129
I was the youngest there
~riette
Wed, Nov 25, 1998 (02:45)
#130
But wouldn't have been, had your answering maching been there too.
~jgross
Wed, Nov 25, 1998 (11:07)
#131
and they had said I could bring "somebody".
I'm so self-centered.
Didn't even think to ask it.
~riette
Wed, Nov 25, 1998 (12:13)
#132
You'd have to buy it flowers. Is it male or female?
~jgross
Wed, Nov 25, 1998 (12:30)
#133
it's not even hermaphrodite.....it's an it.
it turns off when I try to leave flowery messages.
~KitchenManager
Wed, Nov 25, 1998 (16:47)
#134
I personally hate when that happens...
~TIM
Thu, Nov 26, 1998 (02:03)
#135
Buy whoever you are trying to reach, a new answering machine for Christmas.
~riette
Thu, Nov 26, 1998 (07:25)
#136
He's trying to reach THIS answering machine! He's in love with it, you see. I don't think trading it for another is going to make it any happier though!
~TIM
Thu, Nov 26, 1998 (22:38)
#137
True, Riette, But if he trades for the one he wants. then he'll have it. It will
be his alone to do with as he wishes.
~riette
Fri, Nov 27, 1998 (02:23)
#138
PLUS it would have more buttons!
~riette
Fri, Nov 27, 1998 (02:24)
#139
And many different kinds of squeaks!
~TIM
Fri, Nov 27, 1998 (02:30)
#140
And, he could make music with it.
~riette
Fri, Nov 27, 1998 (16:34)
#141
The perfect partner! Why don't all people not do that? He is just so way ahead of us!
~TIM
Fri, Nov 27, 1998 (16:53)
#142
Riette, I definitely prefer the situation that I'm in right now.
~riette
Sat, Nov 28, 1998 (01:56)
#143
You mean you're having a relationship with your hi-fi???
~TIM
Sat, Nov 28, 1998 (02:15)
#144
Well, Riette, If I have to depend on a Hi-Fi, I'm in trouble. Because I don't have one.
~riette
Sat, Nov 28, 1998 (16:02)
#145
Master Blaster then - whatever that word is you use! It doesn't matter. But have you given her a name? Like 'Melody'? 'Cos she lingers on....
~TIM
Sat, Nov 28, 1998 (16:08)
#146
Perhaps, Riette, you meant boom box. And it is definitely not a woman, because...
~riette
Mon, Nov 30, 1998 (02:36)
#147
You mean it has a THING sticking out somewhere to make it male? WHERE?
~TIM
Mon, Nov 30, 1998 (02:42)
#148
Riette, have you ever seen a collapsible antenna?
~riette
Mon, Nov 30, 1998 (02:42)
#149
I see one every night, and every morning.
~riette
Mon, Nov 30, 1998 (02:42)
#150
It receives, then collapses! Isn't that how they all work??
~TIM
Mon, Nov 30, 1998 (02:42)
#151
Well Riette, you understand the principle then!
~riette
Tue, Dec 1, 1998 (02:40)
#152
Do you know what that means, Tim? You have a gay radio fetish!
~TIM
Tue, Dec 1, 1998 (02:45)
#153
Riette, I've heard of quantum leaps before, but that takes the cake. Explain, please.
~riette
Wed, Dec 2, 1998 (02:13)
#154
I asked you if you had any particular fancy for telephone answering machines too? You said no. So asked about your Master Blaster, and whether you were in love with her too. You said, yes, except she's not a she. And I asked, 'huh'?
So you said your Master Blaster is really a boom box, and has a collapsible antenna - which makes him male, right? Because all males have the collapsible antenna thing. So: if your Master Blaster is really a boom box, and male, then you're in love with a gay radio!
See? It makes perfect sense!
~TIM
Wed, Dec 2, 1998 (02:30)
#155
Riette, that is what I get for not reading the responses through
~riette
Wed, Dec 2, 1998 (12:29)
#156
No, it's too late for excuses, Tim - I know what you did last night!
~TIM
Wed, Dec 2, 1998 (12:52)
#157
So Riette, What little bird is talking to you?
~pmnh
Wed, Dec 2, 1998 (15:58)
#158
off subject, tim, but do you mean the church of christ
that one can find in practically any small town in texas?
or is your church independent from that?
~pmnh
Thu, Dec 3, 1998 (07:02)
#159
did i say something wrong?
~TIM
Thu, Dec 3, 1998 (13:47)
#160
Slightly, Nick, There is no central hierarchy in the church of christ. Every church is governed by it's elders. No two are the same.
~pmnh
Thu, Dec 3, 1998 (16:19)
#161
thanks... but can you explain?
did you think i was taking a shot at the church of christ? (i wasn't)...
was only trying to figure out if you were referring to the church
i was familiar with, or some same-named church (i have heard tell of
them) with no connection at all...
and it was interesting to me mainly because i was raised in the church
of christ (which, again, should be regarded as no reflection upon the church)...
interesting too because a recent period of church-lessness caused me
to re-evaluate my old church, or the several of them, as well as my beliefs
as a christian... and i was curious...
anyway, if you did believe i was somehow denigrating the church or your
choice of it or whatever, i do apologize... as i said, was not my intention
at all...
~TIM
Thu, Dec 3, 1998 (17:26)
#162
Actually, It's my belief's that I was a little sensitive about. In these conferences, I have been put in the position of defending some really off the
wall stuff, simply because whoever replied after me had a pet peave about how I
expressed myself. I do not want to be put in that position again. so, when
a male that I don't know asks a question about something that I'm not discussing at the time, I just ignore it. If a woman does the same thing I'll reply. The women in these conferences aren't into head games the way that some of the guys
are.
~pmnh
Thu, Dec 3, 1998 (22:56)
#163
i understand (i think)...
i'll always have a place in my heart for
the church of christ... from my experience
growing up, i have nothing but positive feelings...
the thing you always hear (from others when
they find out that you belong) is the thing about
no musical instrumentation (which was true in each
of the churches i attended)... and the thing about
the exclusivity of church-of-christers among the
saved (which, as far as i can tell, has no root
in reality at all, cause i never heard a single
word about it during all those years)...
did try, a year or so ago, to attend my old church
(in cherokee, ever hear of it?)... but just outside
the front door, just before i entered, i heard a bit
of what the minister was talking about, and i sort of
stopped in my tracks, and listened a bit... the entire
sermon concerned homosexuals, and the tone of the minister
(a man i did, and do not know) was stern, hostile even...
the words made me blanch- won't relate any of it here,
but it disturbed me enough to cause me to turn around
and leave... my children were with me, too, and i certainly
didn't want them to hear any more of what was being said...
afterwards, reflecting upon it, i was a little puzzled by
precisely what it was that had troubled me so... after all,
i'm a liberal commie-type living in rural central texas...
i'm quite accustomed to hearing points of view that i don't
agree with, and have learned it best usually just to keep
my peace, let it roll, whatever... but this really bothered
me, and i guess the thing is, the guy was biblically basically
sound in what he was saying... and that realization sort of
shook my world, cause there was no way i could see to reconcile
these two things that i knew to be true (or thought i did)...
wasn't exactly what i would call a crisis of faith, but it was
something of a reminder to me of my terribly inept powers of
comprehension... have yet to resolve this within myself...
(does this make any sense at all?)
~TIM
Fri, Dec 4, 1998 (00:49)
#164
Yes, it does, by taking words out of context, the bible can be used to justify
anything. The bible does teach against homosexuality, but it does not rank it
any worse than heterosexual promiscuity. The one is held to be equally as bad
as the other. Also,(MAJOR POINT HERE) these teachings are in the old testament.
The old covenant was done away with when Jesus died. A true Christian cannot
hold a violation of old covenant laws against another. For that matter the Bible
teaches the opposite. The Bible teaches tolerance. The new testament of the
Bible says that we are all sinners, and all EQUAL in the eyes of god, no matter
what the sin.
~jgross
Fri, Dec 4, 1998 (02:40)
#165
Tim, if I'm reading you correctly, you're saying that the Old Testament
regards homosexuality as a sin?
And the new testament, do you feel it also regards homosexuality
as a sin?
Is there anything in the new testament that you disagree with?
Are you okay with me asking you these things?
~ratthing
Fri, Dec 4, 1998 (15:33)
#166
i've always viewed the sermon on the mount as a pivotal point in
"changing" between the beliefs of the old and new testaments.
~pmnh
Fri, Dec 4, 1998 (15:33)
#167
i agree regarding the distinction between old and new
covenants (as well as the pivotal nature of the sermon
on the mount in the understanding of it)
don't think there's any doubt that according to
the old testament, homosexuality is a sin (along
with multitudes of other things)... in the new
testament, 'sodomy' is listed as a sin (by paul)
a couple of times, this definition presumeably
inclusive of behaviors indulged in by heterosexuals
as well... as well as 'effeminacy' (by paul again)...
it may be instructive to note that paul also said
something like, as christ was the head of man, man
was the head of woman... that a woman could only
rightly pray with her head covered, but that man
needn't bother, because he (man) is the 'image
and glory' of god... whereas, woman is merely the
glory of man...
neither of these beliefs is advanced in any way by
the reported words of christ himself... so far as
i know, christ never made mention of sodomy or
homosexuality at all, and only mentioned the story
of sodom in reference to other ideas... i think
this is significant, because- logically- the most
reliable words are those attributed to him... there
has been much discussion re: the reasons for great
similarities found in the synoptic gospels, originating
as each did from geographically different areas, and
containing enough deviations in each to make one being
source for the others problematic... one explanation
is the former existence of a 'Q' gospel, upon which
all three were derived... another, more plausible to
me, is that the words attributed to christ were by
his express desire committed to memory by his followers...
while the authorship of each document is open to question,
i think it doubtful to the point of absurdity to conclude
that eyewitnesses did not have at least some hand in
their creation... therefore, when these books were, after
the passing of some 30, 40, and 50 years, finally committed
to written form they contained those particular synoptic
qualities, christ's words... and this is important, especially
from the point of view i allude to, because, no doubt, he
would've been circumspect concerning which of his words
posterity would remember... that he didn't speak of these
issues at all rather disempowers those who later did (and do),
or so at least is my hope...
read that thomas jefferson actually cut christ's words from his
bible, and assembled them together, pasted upon blank pages...
this, he said, was his bible...
.
~TIM
Fri, Dec 4, 1998 (15:33)
#168
That is pretty much the way I see it.
~TIM
Fri, Dec 4, 1998 (15:33)
#169
Jesus came up with two commandments to avoid sin.
"LOVE GOD"
"LOVE THY NEIGHBOR AS THYSELF"
And that's all folks.........
~stacey
Mon, Dec 7, 1998 (20:05)
#170
I like the second one, I'm not so sure about the first
~MarciaH
Sat, Feb 5, 2000 (22:09)
#171
Having just read this topic for the first time, my understanding has been confirmed by words written by others. I knew that and I hope I conveyed the fact that I did understand.
~MarciaH
Sun, Feb 6, 2000 (16:57)
#172
This is long, but really worth the reading...
America's Thanksgiving holiday originated when the Pilgrims gave thanks to
God for sending them an Indian friend named Squanto. This much you already
knew. What you didn't know is that long before the Pilgrims landed at
Plymouth Rock, this same Squanto had been captured by two English sea
captains, George Weymouth and John Hunt, and abused as a slave for fourteen
years. Squanto had been free less than five years when Capt. John Bradford's
Pilgrims arrived on the good ship Mayflower.
Squanto had every reason to organize a killing party and wipe out the
pale-skinned invaders, but he chose to help them instead. Gazing with
pity at Bradford's pathetic band of would-be settlers as they huddled
around Plymouth Rock, Squanto thought, "If I don't help these silly
white men, they're all going to die in the coming winter." And with
that, he walked out of the woods and introduced himself.
Squanto died two years later of a disease contracted from these same
Europeans.
When I was a boy, all the movies were about heroic cowboys and evil
Indians. And in virtually every one of them, courageous settlers had
to circle the wagons to defend themselves against unprovoked attacks
from ape-like Indians who said things like, "Ugh. Me want'um whiskey."
Would you like to know how Indians actually spoke back then? Consider
the musings of Ispwo Mukika Crowfoot, a Blackfoot Indian who was twenty
years old in 1803, the year that Lewis and Clark launched their famous
expedition. As he lay dying, Ispwo left us with these last words: "What is
life? It is the flash of a firefly in the night. It is the breath of a
buffalo in the wintertime. It is the little shadow which runs across the
grass and loses itself in the sunset."
Was Ispwo Crowfoot a particularly eloquent Indian? Not at all. Fifty-
nine years earlier, when George Washington was just a twelve-year-old
boy, the Collected Chiefs of the Indian Nations met to discuss a letter from
the College of William & Mary suggesting that they "send twelve of their
young men to the college, that they might be taught to read and write." The
Chiefs sent the following reply:
Sirs,
We know that you highly esteem the kind of learning taught in Colleges, and
that the Maintenance of our young Men, while with you, would be very
expensive to you. We are convinced, therefore, that you mean to do us Good
by your Proposal; and we thank you heartily. But you, who are wise, must
know that different Nations have different Conceptions of things; and you
will therefore not take it amiss, if our Ideas of this kind of Education
happen not to be the same with yours. We have some experience of it. Several
of our Young People were formerly brought up at the colleges of the Northern
Provinces; they were instructed in all your sciences; but, when they came
back to us they were bad Runners, ignorant of every means of living in the
Woods,unable to bear either Cold or Hunger, knew neither how to build a
cabin, take a Deer, or kill an Enemy, spoke our Language imperfectly,
were therefore neither fit for Hunters, Warriors, nor Counselors;
they were totally good for nothing. We are, however, not the less
obliged by your kind Offer, though we decline accepting it; and, to
show our grateful Sense of it, if the Gentlemen of Virginia will send
us a Dozen of their Sons, we will take care of their Education;
instruct them in all we know, and make Men of them.
~cfadm
Thu, Mar 3, 2005 (10:37)
#173
Sect. 43 of Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations says that: "For a large class of cases--though not for all--in which we employ the word "meaning" it can be defined thus: the meaning of a word is its use in the language."
It is quite clear that here Wittgenstein is not offering the general theory that "meaning is use," as he is sometimes interpreted as doing. The main rival views that Wittgenstein warns against are that the meaning of a word is some object that it names--in which case the meaning of a word could be destroyed, stolen or locked away, which is nonsense--and that the meaning of a word is some psychological feeling--in which case each user of a word could mean something different by it, having a different feeling, and communication would be difficult if not impossible.
Knowing the meaning of a word can involve knowing many things: to what objects the word refers (if any), whether it is slang or not, what part of speech it is, whether it carries overtones, and if so what kind they are, and so on. To know all this, or to know enough to get by, is to know the use. And generally knowing the use means knowing the meaning. Philosophical questions about consciousness, for example, then, should be responded to by looking at the various uses we make of the word "consciousness." Scientific investigations into the brain are not directly relevant to this inquiry (although they might be indirectly relevant if scientific discoveries led us to change our use of such words). The meaning of any word is a matter of what we do with our language, not something hidden inside anyone's mind or brain. This is not an attack on neuroscience. It is merely distinguishing philosophy (which is properly concerned with linguistic or conceptual analysis) from science (which is concerned with discovering
acts).
One exception to the meaning-is-use rule of thumb is given in Philosophical Investigations Sect.561, where Wittgenstein says that "the word "is" is used with two different meanings (as the copula and as the sign of equality)" but that its meaning is not its use. That is to say, "is" has not one complex use (including both "Water is clear" and "Water is H2O") and therefore one complex meaning, but two quite distinct uses and meanings. It is an accident that the same word has these two uses. It is not an accident that we use the word "car" to refer to both Fords and Hondas. But what is accidental and what is essential to a concept depends on us, on how we use it.
This is not completely arbitrary, however. Depending on one's environment, one's physical needs and desires, one's emotions, one's sensory capacities, and so on, different concepts will be more natural or useful to one. This is why "forms of life" are so important to Wittgenstein. What matters to you depends on how you live (and vice versa), and this shapes your experience. So if a lion could speak, Wittgenstein says, we would not be able to understand it. We might realize that "roar" meant zebra, or that "roar, roar" meant lame zebra, but we would not understand lion ethics, politics, aesthetic taste, religion, humor and such like, if lions have these things. We could not honestly say "I know what you mean" to a lion. Understanding another involves empathy, which requires the kind of similarity that we just do not have with lions, and that many people do not have with other human beings.
When a person says something what he or she means depends not only on what is said but also on the context in which it is said. Importance, point, meaning are given by the surroundings. Words, gestures, expressions come alive, as it were, only within a language game, a culture, a form of life. If a picture, say, means something then it means so to somebody. Its meaning is not an objective property of the picture in the way that its size and shape are. The same goes of any mental picture. Hence Wittgenstein's remark that "If God had looked into our minds he would not have been able to see there whom we were speaking of." Any internal image would need interpretation. If I interpret my thought as one of Hitler and God sees it as Charlie Chaplin, who is right? Which of the two famous contemporaries of Wittgenstein's I mean shows itself in the way I behave, the things I do and say. It is in this that the use, the meaning, of my thought or mental picture lies. "The arrow points only in the application that a livi
g being makes of it."