Image for Articulating a thought

Articulating a thought

See all formats and editions

Articulating a thought can be astoundingly easy. We generally have no trouble expressing complex ideas that we have never considered before, though not always.

Articulating a thought can also be extremely hard. Our difficulties in articulating thoughts pervade many aspects of philosophical inquiry, as well as many ordinary situations.

While we may overcome some of the challenges through education and practice, we cannot do away with them altogether. And the hardestthoughts to articulate often come to us unbidden: as we neither assemble them from other thoughts nor get them from any source of external information.

They can come from us freely and spontaneously, and frequently we articulate them in order to find out what they are.

In many cases, we would notbother articulating our thoughts if we already had this knowledge-yet, when we find the right words, we can often instantly tell that they express our thought.

How do we manage to recognize the formulations of our thoughts, in the absence of prior knowledge of what we are thinking? And why is it that producing a public language formulation contributes in any way to the deeply private undertaking of coming to know our own thoughts?

In Articulating a Thought, Eli Alshanetsky considershow we make our thoughts clear to ourselves in the process of putting them into words and examines the paradox of those difficult cases where we do not already know what we are struggling to articulate.

Read More
Available
£70.00
Add Line Customisation
Available on VLeBooks
Add to List
Product Details
Oxford University Press
0191088927 / 9780191088926
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
28/11/2019
English
176 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%