Factual and action-oriented
gpt.icon There are two types of linguistic behaviourism: "factual" and "action-oriented". For example, the question, "What does your work mean?" may appear to be simply a factual question, but behind it may be "doesn't your work mean anything?" can also have the meaning of "What does your work mean? Such an interpretation cannot be determined by the form of the text alone. And this question of interpretation has been studied by many scholars. All propositions are open to action-performance interpretation, and certain meanings are not fixed. However, in order to facilitate communication, society has established rules in some areas that allow propositions to be accepted only in a fact-checking manner. Academic conference papers are one example.
With regard to the recent hot topic of the "humanities/science" debate, the actual issue is the level of interpretation, whether it is fact-confirming or action-performing, and the understanding of the social mechanisms that stabilize that interpretation. In other words, the key question in dialogue is at what level of interpretation of propositions. This issue can also be considered as a question of epistemology and ethics.
Finally, references on linguistic action theory include the work of J. L. Austin, John Searle, and others, as well as Bakhtin's theory of dialogue and Bateson's theory of the double bind.
Classification by [J.L. Austin
He pointed out that while traditional linguistic theory has focused primarily on the truth or falsehood of propositions, the utterance of a sentence is at the same time the performance of an action. For example, uttering "I promise," in other words, is nothing but the performance of the act of "promising. Such an act executed by saying something is called an "act in utterance.
International Encyclopedia Britannica, Small Encyclopedia
Formal analysis does not tell us which way a given sentence should be interpreted
All propositions are open to action-performance reading = meaning is not fixed
→Hindrances to communication
Areas that are only received in a fact-checking manner (e.g., conferences)
Social devices that stabilize interpretation
Two different opinions
dialogue should be a rational and logical exchange of ideas The interpretation of the proposition must be limited to a fact-checking level before it can be done.
Mikhail Bakhtin
Conceived of dialogue as a battle of action-oriented propositions rather than an exchange of fact-oriented propositions
must-read
application
I don't really like the "science and arts" kind of division, so I cut it out.
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