- Feb 15, 2013
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Threads have been popping up here and there concerning the meaning of life - whether or not life has meaning and whether or not life needs meaning, etc. But the more fundamental question of what it means for a life to have meaning has been quietly assumed. Let's draw it out into the open here.
To inter-related questions:
1. What does it mean for anything to have meaning?
2. In light of (1), what does it mean for a life to have meaning?
What does it mean for anything to have meaning?
Let's look at a few other common subjects that we suppose "have meaning". A few immediately come to mind:
1. Language
2. Events
3. Art
Language
Imagine walking along a deserted beach. You come across what looks like a line drawn in the sand.
You wonder to yourself: "Hmmm. What does this line mean?" What do you mean when you ask such a thing? Likely you're wondering whether or not the line was drawn by a person and whether or not the person was trying to communicate. What was the person trying to communicate? A number 1? The letter "I"? An abstract drawing of a tree?
It's of course possible that the line has no linguistic or artistic meaning. Perhaps the line was left behind by a hermit crab crawling through the sand. In this case the line would mean: "a hermit crab has been here." This would then fall into the category of "meaning of events".
But suppose you stumble across a more complicated figure in the sand. Something that looks like this:
Possibly even something like this:
It now seems like you're reading letters and words and not just looking at meaningless lines. But in order for these figures to mean "E" and "hello" there must have been a person who intended to say "E" and "hello".
If you later find out that, for instance, a hermit crab happened to make these marks as well, you cannot conclude that the marks mean "E" or "hello". They only resemble "E" and "hello" by pure coincidence.
So with language meaning depends upon the intention of the author.
Events
You come home early from work and notice your front door ajar. Upon closer examination it seems as if the door has been kicked in. As you walk inside you notice signs of struggle, broken glass on the floor, and blood in the kitchen. Your family is nowhere to be found and a man you've never seen before is standing in the kitchen.
You might ask something like: "what is the meaning of this?!"
What do you mean by this question? You notice a bizarre series of events that you don't understand. You don't know what has happened and you want to know. You don't know who broke in, whether or not there was a struggle, where your family is, or who this stranger is. You simply notice signs that something unknown has taken place.
All of these signs could mean that this stranger broke into your home, harmed your family, and is now standing before you. But they could also mean something radically different. But either way you're trying to read the situation. Much like you would read a novel.
You're ultimately asking what all these signs add up to. And much like language you're looking for an author and for intentions. Who authored this situation? Who is responsible for this? What was this person intending to do? What has this person, in fact, done?
So it seems as if the meaning of events also has to do with authorial intent.
Art
This one can get complicated. Representational art seems simple enough.
What does this painting mean? On one level, the painting means "bowl of fruit". It's clear enough that the artist was intending to convey a bowl of fruit. We immediately recognize it.
But what does this painting mean? The answer is less clear. It's possible that the painting really has no meaning. It's simply beautiful. Or ugly. Whether or not it means something would depend upon whether or not the artist intended to convey some content. If there is no content that the artist meant to convey then the painting has no meaning.
So even in art meaning depends upon authors and intentions.
Conclusion
Wherever there is meaning there is an author and some content that the author intends to convey.
So what does it mean for a life to have meaning? We can only answer this question if we locate the author and discover his or her intentions. So the questions are: "who is the author of our life?" and "what are his or her intentions?"
Without an author or intentions our lives have no meaning.
To inter-related questions:
1. What does it mean for anything to have meaning?
2. In light of (1), what does it mean for a life to have meaning?
What does it mean for anything to have meaning?
Let's look at a few other common subjects that we suppose "have meaning". A few immediately come to mind:
1. Language
2. Events
3. Art
Language
Imagine walking along a deserted beach. You come across what looks like a line drawn in the sand.

You wonder to yourself: "Hmmm. What does this line mean?" What do you mean when you ask such a thing? Likely you're wondering whether or not the line was drawn by a person and whether or not the person was trying to communicate. What was the person trying to communicate? A number 1? The letter "I"? An abstract drawing of a tree?
It's of course possible that the line has no linguistic or artistic meaning. Perhaps the line was left behind by a hermit crab crawling through the sand. In this case the line would mean: "a hermit crab has been here." This would then fall into the category of "meaning of events".
But suppose you stumble across a more complicated figure in the sand. Something that looks like this:

Possibly even something like this:

It now seems like you're reading letters and words and not just looking at meaningless lines. But in order for these figures to mean "E" and "hello" there must have been a person who intended to say "E" and "hello".
If you later find out that, for instance, a hermit crab happened to make these marks as well, you cannot conclude that the marks mean "E" or "hello". They only resemble "E" and "hello" by pure coincidence.
So with language meaning depends upon the intention of the author.
Events
You come home early from work and notice your front door ajar. Upon closer examination it seems as if the door has been kicked in. As you walk inside you notice signs of struggle, broken glass on the floor, and blood in the kitchen. Your family is nowhere to be found and a man you've never seen before is standing in the kitchen.
You might ask something like: "what is the meaning of this?!"
What do you mean by this question? You notice a bizarre series of events that you don't understand. You don't know what has happened and you want to know. You don't know who broke in, whether or not there was a struggle, where your family is, or who this stranger is. You simply notice signs that something unknown has taken place.
All of these signs could mean that this stranger broke into your home, harmed your family, and is now standing before you. But they could also mean something radically different. But either way you're trying to read the situation. Much like you would read a novel.
You're ultimately asking what all these signs add up to. And much like language you're looking for an author and for intentions. Who authored this situation? Who is responsible for this? What was this person intending to do? What has this person, in fact, done?
So it seems as if the meaning of events also has to do with authorial intent.
Art
This one can get complicated. Representational art seems simple enough.

What does this painting mean? On one level, the painting means "bowl of fruit". It's clear enough that the artist was intending to convey a bowl of fruit. We immediately recognize it.

But what does this painting mean? The answer is less clear. It's possible that the painting really has no meaning. It's simply beautiful. Or ugly. Whether or not it means something would depend upon whether or not the artist intended to convey some content. If there is no content that the artist meant to convey then the painting has no meaning.
So even in art meaning depends upon authors and intentions.
Conclusion
Wherever there is meaning there is an author and some content that the author intends to convey.
So what does it mean for a life to have meaning? We can only answer this question if we locate the author and discover his or her intentions. So the questions are: "who is the author of our life?" and "what are his or her intentions?"
Without an author or intentions our lives have no meaning.