Meaning is a much more fundamental notion than truth, indeed more fundamental even than the notion of "reality" itself. The basic argument [of the essay] was that claims about truth or reality are meanings made by people according to patterns that they have learned, and that trying to understand how and why people make the meanings they do is more useful than fighting over the truth of their claims.


p. 156 - Textual politics: Discourse and social dynamics, 1995


Meaning is a much more fundamental notion than truth, indeed more fundamental even than the notion of reality itself. The basic argument [of the...

Meaning is a much more fundamental notion than truth, indeed more fundamental even than the notion of reality itself. The basic argument [of the...

Meaning is a much more fundamental notion than truth, indeed more fundamental even than the notion of reality itself. The basic argument [of the...

Meaning is a much more fundamental notion than truth, indeed more fundamental even than the notion of reality itself. The basic argument [of the...