Originally posted by Lance This is being taken a bit too far. The point is being missed entirely.
In the way you would normally classify knowledge? I wasn't aware there was a universal definition that limited knowledge to only words. In fact, in my opinion, words have nothing to do with knowledge at all.
You basically say words are empty because their definitions can only be determined by using other words, and so on into infinity. Well, but if someone takes me to a table, points, and says "THAT is a table.", do I remain totally ignorant of what a table is and have nothing but hollow concepts in my mind? No. I know what a table is because I have seen it, not because there are a thousand other hollow concepts that refer to it.
Yes, concepts are empty. They do not exist. Hence, you know nothing, but you are looking at it from the wrong perspective.
Look at the mind of an infant. When they look around, they do not see anything as separate from anything else. They see a table, but they also see the floor, the chairs, the cup and everything else around it all melded into one thing. During the first weeks of infancy, they do not even know that they are separate from their mothers. This is because an infant does not have concepts to define a table from the floor, so they are one thing.
So yes, you do know what a table is if you've seen it, but that is only because you have other things to define it. If you did not have any concepts whatsoever and looked at a kitchen, would you be able to find the table?
You might have seen the table before, maybe even touched it, studied it or moved it around, but without definitions for it, all you have are shapeless emotions attached to the things you perceive. In that sense, you know what a table is. Until someone points and says "Table," then you know what it "really" is.
You have to understand that concepts do not exist. They are just ideas that we have to stabilize our reality. If concepts don't exist and we base our reality upon them, then we know nothing. [/b]
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