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    For expression to be genuinely new, the speaker must tran... — Carmelics
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    Supports→True expression requires both 'speaking speech' (the act of genuine creation) and 'spoken speech' (the shared linguistic substrate).

    For expression to be genuinely new, the speaker must transform and re-compose shared elements idiosyncratically.

    AestheticsPhilosophy of Language
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    AestheticsPhilosophy of Language

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    For expression to be understandable, the language it uses (natural, scientific, ...True expression must be at once a true creation — something unheard of — and yet...True expression requires both 'speaking speech' (the act of genuine creation) an...

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    True expression is both totally idiosyncratic and a re-composition of ...87%True expression requires both 'speaking speech' (the act of genuine cr...78%True expression must be at once a true creation — something unheard of...75%The speaker acts as she does precisely because of what she means by th...72%

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    This in turn gives a more specific meaning to the relation of the new and the old in expression. True expression (whether the first genuine self-expression of the learning speaker, a new scientific meaning, or true artistic achievement) is both totally idiosyncratic, and a re-composition of shared elements; it transforms the old. For true expression to occur, two forms of speech are thus required: “speaking speech” and “spoken speech” (Merleau-Ponty, 1945a, 197). This explains the puzzling fact

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