I wish to start a discussion about "words". I have recently been involved in two different threads where "words" were brought into discussion themselves, however not being the subject of the threads, I felt it not approtpriate to expand on it, in those threads. I will start with the quotes from those threads that discussed "words".
Terri(SO) wrote:
Words carry great power in our lives which can deeply
affect us whether consciously or subconsciously.
I disagree with both of these statements. I am going to paraphrase from Waking Life here, because I don't feel like putting the movie on and finding the part so I can quote it, but I will try my best to get it accurate.CJ wrote:
"Words are deeds," Wittgenstein once said. There's
little difference between what we do (or what others do
with and to us) and what we say (or what others say to
us). They're both behaviours.
[Words are inert, they are dead, they are nothing. For instance if I say the word love, it rolls off my tongue vibrates the air, enters your ear, and then it goes through a series of filters about your experience with your feelings of love or your lack of feelings of love, but you only interpret the sound. How do I know that when I say love, it means the same thing to you that is does to me?]
So much of our experience is intangable. We attempt to describe it with words, but our own meaning of words varies so much, even among people who speak the same language, not to mention those who speak a different language, that we continually misunderstand one another. Not because we chose the wrong words, but because the words we chose, describe our own experience, which may differ greatly from the person we are attempting to communicate with.
What the world can know about me, is a result of my ability to communicate that. Many people go through life defined by others because they either can not, or will not define themselves.
It is my belief that it is not words that carry great power in our lives, it is what those words mean to us as individuals, and what we do with them. They can motivate us, they can sadden us, they can bring us joy. But only after they go through our own personal filter and attach meaning to them.
Spoken words carry no meaning to the deaf, written words carry no meaning for the blind. Words are not deeds, imho. Deeds are deeds. Words are what we use to describe those deeds.
I have had communication many times with others, with no words at all. With a look, or a jesture, or even a prearranged event. A siren, a scream, laughter, crying. But no matter what symbols we use to communicate with one another, it still must be interpreted by our own brain, which gives it it's own meaning.
I will always beleive that communication is the responsibility of the communicator. To fault someone for not understanding what was trying to be conveyed to them, makes little sense to me. In all the classes I have taken, speech, debate, creative writing, and all the "effective management"and "advertising" seminars I have participated in, this is always a theme. To learn how to communicate with others, and to make sure they walk away with the understanding you wanted them to have.
And finally many words and phrases have different meanings depending on context. Sometimes just the inflection in our voice can change the meaning of what we say. For instance I can say "nice dress" but depending on the inflection in my voice or a look on my face or just a gesture, it can be an insult, or a compliment.
It is my beleif that words are inert, but that it is by our actions that we give words meaning, not the other way around.
I welcome the views of my sisters on this matter, becuase it would seem my own views are limited in this regard. My hope is to expand my own knowledge and hence my experience, with and about words.
Love always,
Elizabeth
