Note 3-P853: The concept and sound image are two very important ideas that need to be solidified within the context of this work in order to understand fully what Saussure is trying to explain. On P853 Saussure explains that when we can speak without moving our lips and still hear our own thoughts manifest themselves in our own minds in words, though they are not exactly words anymore; they are concepts. This is the most illuminating paragraph in the entire article, it is the key to understanding everything else. We are all aware of the concept of up, it is the vertical increase of height from an original point in space, and it is also the word arriba in Spanish. The word arriba and up are two sound image that we associate with vertical increases (concept/signified), that in turn create a sing we can understand (signifier).
The word up is a signifier, it introduces a concept, though up as a signifier can have multiple meaning depending on the context. 3. What does Saussure mean when he says that the two “primordial” characteristics” of a given sign within a system are its *arbitrariness* and its “linear nature”? This covers a lot of ground: he introduces these concepts on pp. 965-6 and clarifies them throughout the essay!
The actual signified things and its relationship to the word that has been created for share an arbitrary relationship because inevitably the concept that we created to associate to it will never be naturally connected to the signified. If we name something in nature, like say grass, we have created a relationship exclusive to ourselves; one only us as humans care to acknowledge. When Saussure says, “that the two “primordial” characteristics of a given sign within a system are its arbitrariness and it’s linear nature”, he is merely acknowledging that the creation or big bang that have created a sign are interconnected to the signified, while being distinct from it (because it exists in our minds as humans only).
The “two sides of the same sheet of paper” analogy Saussure uses to explain the relationship between signifier and signified, explains in the best way possible how inseparable the two concepts are. The physical thing we see and the concept (signifier) that it evokes in us reside in two different planes of existence, yet somehow are inseparable in our minds when we think of one or the other. We cannot help to think of the word horse when we see one, yet our concept of what a horse is an abstraction of the actual animal and can never capture it’s absolute meaning in this world.
The best way to understand this is to think back to Nietzsche , and associate his use of the concept of perpetual lies that we incorporate into the abstractions we create for the world us. Much like the concepts we use to abstract the world around us and categorize everything neatly into something we can understand into a human form (in the Nietzschian sense), we also do the same in the context of Saussure’s “signifier/signified” semiotic concept as well, because both men are illuminating the limitations of our own biology/humanity.
It is all about dropping humanity down a peg, so that we can understand that we aren’t the perfect center of the universes we all think we are, but rather as limited as any other animal that we deem to be inferior to ourselves.
Thought and language never really connect together, they are two different sides of the same shapeless coin. Though and language are two jumbled ideas that “produce a form, not a substance”. The arbitrary relationship between though and language is incapable of creating anything concrete.
Concept: The value of a word is its property of standing for an idea.
The money trading analogy helps to remind us that the value of a word, or the idea that it represent exists only because it is surround by other similar and completely different ideas that exist in the same system. IOW A word is not valuable because of the sounds that create it (value in itself), but because of the what it represents in its definition: a meaning relative to other definitions of words around it.
The differences in language that Saussure speaks about is merely the idea that all things that participate in the totality of language hold meaning through the negative differences between them. What I mean by the negative differences is that the stark difference between two sounds give them meaning in speech, and as a result we are able to piece together a word that also by its very definition within the context of Saussure’s semiotics holds a distinct presence in our system of language that gives it value as a sign. “Language is a form and not a substance.”
“A particular word is like the center of a constellation; it is the point of convergence of an indefinite number of coordinated terms.”
GENIUS!!