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re:MeaningIn the conv...
Meaning
In the conventional view of language-related behavior, words and sentences have meaning, and the meaning contained in an utterance is passed from speaker to listener. To a linguist interested in a formal analysis of the structure of English, such a view might do little harm. As a theory of the behavior of speaking or verbal behavior, however, it suffers all the sortcomings of any mentalistic theory.
Reference theories
Philosophers and psychologists, trying to turn the rough everyday notion of meaning into a more definite theory of language, invented theories that rely on the notion of reference. The word dog, for example, whether spoken, written, or heard, is said to refer to the sort of four-lagged mammal that arks.
Symbols and lexicons. The notion of reference suggests that the different forms of the word dog – spoken, heard, written, seen – are symbols for the category of actual dogs. How can all these symbols are recognized as equivalent? All the different symbols are somehow connected to something inside. Since actual dogs cannot be inside the person, some representation of the category is supposed to exist somewhere inside, and all the symbols for dog are said to be linked to this representation.
Where is this representation? It is said to be in a lexicon, a collection of such representations of objects and events of the real world. The speaker is said to look for the representation in the lexicon, find it there connected to its symbols, and then use the appropriate symbol. The listener is said to hear the symbol, look up the symbol in the lexicon, find it connected with its representation, and then understand it.
The idea of reference was probably invented to explain equivalences. Add to this variety the words for dog in different languages, and you may see how tempting it is to suppose that all these acts and stimuli are equivalent because they are all somehow tied to some representation or meaning somewhere inside.
It is altogether too easy to suppose that the observed equivalence arises from some ghostly inner equivalence. But where did the observed (or ghostly) equivalence come from. We come to do this over time, after exposure to these different stimuli, and after a history of reinforcement for the appropriate response.
The importance of context. Not only do reference theories offer no account of speaking, they fail even at the task for which they were invented – making sense of meaning – because they cannot take account of context. (e.g., water means differently in different situations, a request, a question, the naming of a liquid on the floor, and the naming of an ingredient.) If context determines the meaning of concrete nouns like water, how much more fundamental it is to the meaning of abstract nouns and utterances composed of many words (e.g., most people in the United States regard poison ivy as a weed; whereas people in some Scandinavian countries consider it an attractive plant for landscaping. The word weed depends as much on the circumstances as it does on the plant.) Reference theories have an even worse time with actual utterances containing several words. Suppose my son and I are building a brick wall. My job is laying the bricks, and his job is handing me bricks. Again and again, I ask for a brick. I say, Hand me a brick, Let’s have a brick, Brick!, I need a brick, Give us a brick, and many other variations. Sometimes I just turn and look or hold out my hand. All of these acts have the same meaning. You could not find the meaning by looking in a lexicon because their meaning lies in what the acts accomplish: getting my son to hand me a brick so that we can proceed with the wall.
Meaning as use
Instead of talking about meaning, behaviorists talk about the use or function of an act or utterance. Roughly speaking, that is the meaning of meaning.
Consequence and Context: Suppose I put a rat in a chamber with a lever and a chain. Pulling on the chain produces food; pressing on the lever produces water. The rat pulls and eats, presses and drinks. You could say that the meaning of a chain-pull is food and the meaning of a lever-press is water. A person in the same situation might make the sound food and receive food, make the sound water and receive water. Are these situations fundamentally different? The behaviorist says no. the rat has had no food for a time – it pulls the chain and gets food. John has had no food for a time – he says food and gets food. Either way, the use of the act consists of its consequences in the context.
The meaning of verbal behavior is its use its consequences in the context. The context in which someone would emit an utterance including the word meaning tells us the meaning of meaning.
As with other operant behavior, verbal behavior depends on a history of reinforcement. To say that the use or meaning of a verbal operant is its consequences in the context is to say that is occurrence depends on a history of such consequences in such contexts. My children learned to say please when they made a request because again and again reinforcement was available only for a request including that word.
Mands and Tacts. In every terms, verbal operants serve a variety of purposes. Two of the most important are to request and to inform. Mands include not only request, but commands (e.g., the army sergeant who says left face!), questions (e.g., My asking you what time is it?) and even advice (e.g., a parent tells a child you should take algebra this year). The exact setting in which the request, question, or advice may be emitted can vary widely, and yet we still recognize it as the same mand – whether Bob asks Jane for salt or whether he asks Tom, Dick or Harry – because the reinforcer is the same. When the reinforcer of a verbal operant is well-specified, the operant is a mand.
Verbal operant that might be considered informative specify no particular reinforcer; rather occur in the presence of some particular discriminative stimulus. The whole point of the utterance there is a tiger behaved you is the tiger; the reinforcer that the listener will provide remains unspecified. Skiner called such verbal operant tacts.
Tacts include a wide variey of utterances. Opinions and observatios are tacts. replies to questions are often tacts: you look at your watch and tell me the correct time. What we have been calling verbal reports are all examples of tacts.
Dictionary definitions. If words and utterances cannot be understood by their inherent meaning, then why should we bother with dictionary definitions? Let us rephrase the question. How are dictionary definitions helpful? When I come across an unfamiliar word an consult a dictionary, I do not learn the meaning of the word; I get a summary of how the word is used, usually with one or more examples and some synonyms (different words that might occur in similar circumstances or have similar effects) and antonyms (different words that occur in contrasting circumstances or have contrasting effect). All of this helps to guide my behavior as reader, listener, speaker and writer.
Thus, dictionaries do not contain meanings. They exemplify the general way that we learn how to use words, by hearing and seeing them used. How did you learn jump, run, talk, car, and baby? Most of the words we use we never look up in a dictionary, and no one ever defines them for us. If this were not so, dictionaries would be useless, because they explain how to use a word in terms of other words that are supposed to be familiar already.
Technical terms. What is true of everyday words you might look up in a dictionary is doubly true of technical terms invented by scientists and other professionals. A term is aways defined in terms of others. Sometimes a set of interrelated terms are equally familiar (or unfamiliar) yet are still all defined in terms of one another. Consider the term trait, gene, and inherit. None can be defined without using the other two. So, too, with the terms of behavior analysis: reinforcement, operant, discriminative stimulus. What is operant behavior? Behavior that is more likely in the presence of a discriminative stimulus because of a history of reinforcement in the presence of that stimulus.
This interdependence of definitions only seems to be a problem if we insist that each term must have its own separate meaning, suitable for storage in ghostly lexicon. It poses no real problem for scientists; it is simply a feature of scientific vocabularies. Interdependence of terms just means that they tend to be used together.
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