I've read that philosophers claim that the sorts of things that can be true are things that could be potentially talked about in words. It also seems held that truth is essential to knowledge. Hence, it seems that the claim is that language is essential to knowledge.
But I was looking at an intricate (but ugly) carpet yesterday, and it really did seem to me that it wordlessly expressed knowledge, as much as many sentences do.
Why cannot a visual idea express knowledge as well as a word idea?
Ugly carpets don't do much for me, but I'm sympathetic to your thought that there may be knowledge that is carried by non-verbal representations. For example, animals without language can I think nevertheless have perceptual knowledge. Even my old chow chow dog Mishka, not an Einstein even by canine standards, knew when there was food it his bowl.
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