Language is a Sense
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Language is the structure of reality. The language used to describe the senses are in themselves a sense and alter worldly perspective. There is a meta-reinforcement of paradigm and interpretation that cannot be easily teased apart from the world. The senses themselves are altered by the language used to describe the very sense - until one day the very senses we used to build language become indistinguishable with the senses themselves. The farmer sees a field and the rancher sees a pasture.
The question posed is: can you separate interpretation from the world? Or must the world always be subjectively interpreted by an existing language framework?
Another question to pose: where does language come from - and why do I, in my personal anecdotal experiences, find in some states the ease to find positive words and in others a great disturbance to find the very same words?
To argue that the language and interpretation is of the world then is to say that the world creates the language and world itself - that language is fundamentally a part of the world. It is not some overlaying structure to interpret - it IS the world, and the world IS the language.
Language is a sense in that it is the medium of which we see. Wittgenstein was right - language affects perception, is dependent on context, and derives its meaning in use.