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Full Idea
Against Wittgenstein's family resemblance view one might evoke his own idea that the meaning of a word is its use, and that diversity of use entails diversity of meaning.
Gist of Idea
We might say that the family resemblance is just a consequence of meaning-as-use
Source
Hans-Johann Glock (What is Analytic Philosophy? [2008], 8.2)
Book Ref
Glock,Han-Johann: 'What is Analytic Philosophy?' [CUP 2008], p.215
A Reaction
Wittgenstein might just accept the point. Diversity of concepts reflects diversity of usage. But how do you distinguish 'football is a game' from 'oy, what's your game?'. How does usage distinguish metaphorical from literal (if it does)?
Related Idea
Idea 4141 Various games have a 'family resemblance', as their similarities overlap and criss-cross [Wittgenstein]
22332 | German and British idealism is not about individual ideas, but the intelligibility of reality [Glock] |
22334 | Analysis must include definitions, search for simples, concept analysis, and Kant's analysis [Glock] |
22335 | The variety of uses of 'game' may be that it has several meanings, and isn't a single concept [Glock] |
22336 | We might say that the family resemblance is just a consequence of meaning-as-use [Glock] |