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    For expression to be understandable, the language it uses... — 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 understandable, the language it uses (natural, scientific, or artistic) must already be known by the audience.

    AestheticsPhilosophy of Language
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    AestheticsPhilosophy of Language

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    For expression to be genuinely new, the speaker must transform and re-compose sh...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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    For expression to be understood, it must draw on a language already kn...84%Someone who understands a language knows the meanings of the expressio...79%Mutual knowledge of a language L sufficient for communication is achie...77%True expression must be at once a true creation — something unheard of...77%

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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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