TST treats language and definitions as powerful human tools that stem from reality, but are never reality itself.
Words help us organize, communicate, test, and refine our ideas, but they remain on the human side of the split between the material world and our descriptions of it. Our side of the split matters, but it is never the world itself. In TST, words do matter because they shape thought, but they never become the thing they describe. A description of gravity is never gravity itself.
Most importantly, language is never perfect. It can move us closer to absolute truth, but because absolute truth exists only in nature, language is true only to the degree that it aligns with reality. And it can mislead us, especially when we mistake labels, categories, or stories for the world itself. So TST treats language with both respect and caution: respect because clear language sharpens thought, and caution because language is always approximation.
More specifically, TST sees language as a bridge between minds, not a perfect mirror of reality. We do not experience the world raw. We experience it through perception, memory, culture, and language. That makes language indispensable, but also limited. It can clarify, but it can also compress, oversimplify, and distort. Good language helps us aim better. It does not erase the gap between the world and our talk about it.
Definitions work the same way. In TST, they are disciplined working tools. A good definition does not capture the full essence of a thing once and for all. It reduces confusion, improves communication, and makes better reasoning possible. Sloppy definitions lead to sloppy thinking, but overconfident definitions can trap us too. A definition is a map key, not the territory.
This puts TST near analytic philosophy in one important way. Analytic philosophy often treats language as something to clarify, analyze, and discipline. That instinct fits TST well. TST also believes that clearer language usually leads to clearer thinking. But TST does not go so far as to treat philosophical problems as mostly language problems. Language matters deeply, but the final question is still whether our words and concepts line up with the world we actually share.
TST also shares something with continental philosophy. Many continental thinkers stress that language is shaped by history, culture, meaning, identity, and power. TST agrees. Words do not come from nowhere, and language helps shape how we experience reality. But TST parts company when some strands drift too far toward instability, ambiguity, or the idea that truth dissolves into interpretation. TST heeds the caution without surrendering realism. Language shapes interpretation, yes, but reality still pushes back.
TST also differs from stronger forms of linguistic skepticism. Linguistic skepticism is right about one big thing: language cannot fully capture lived experience or the full depth of reality. TST accepts that. But it does not follow that language is hopeless, or that truth disappears into words about words. Instead, TST treats language as stemming from reality, limited by it, and always open to refinement. We refine our terms, test our claims, compare models, and keep adjusting. In that sense, TST handles language the same way it handles knowledge more broadly: with disciplined effort, public correction, and humility before reality.