I don't see what that has to do with this thread. — wonderer1
The salient bit is a subtle argument from Kripke, summarised in the SEP.I have to confess that I don't really understand what modal identity is. A brief explanation or a reference would help me a lot. — Ludwig V
(K1) If Hesperus = Phosphorus, then necessarily (Hesperus = Phosphorus)
(K2) Hesperus = Phosphorus
(K3) Necessarily, (Hesperus = Phosphorus)
K1 if schopenhauer1 has such-and-such a genome, then necessarily schopenhauer1 has such-and-such a genome.
It involves lawyers. Of course it does.It depends. — Ciceronianus
What is claimed here is not at odds with that. We agree that the promise now exists, where prior to the promising it did not.Take care with "that's it" A contract to build a house usually leads to there being a house, which does not exist only in someone's mind. Unless you are Joshs.The promise exists in the mind of the promiser, and their audience. That's it. — hypericin
I'd drop the superfluous "real", which misleads into idealism of one sort or another. Thoughts are objects in that we can predicate to and identify them. In other ways they are not like tables and chairs. Again, Austin's analysis of "real" shows how to avoid being misled.Among the alternatives to physicalism is the idea that thoughts are real objects in the world. — Joshs
I am reluctant to enter into the fray — Leontiskos
Yeah, I'm still working through all this... for me "states of affairs" are just what's happening at some specific time and place. It's a proxy for the term "reality" and the phrase "the way things are", etc.
There's always Hume's guillotine. I see it. However, I think there's a way to render it toothless. — creativesoul
I'm not speaking for Banno, although I suspect he would agree. — creativesoul
Your argument is that therefore the contract is physical?If there is literally no record of an agreement it will not be accepted by a court. — AmadeusD
You made the claim that they are physical. I pointed out that they are more than just physical.No. This needs to read "any record of it whatever, is destroyed" which is the case i made. — AmadeusD
That’s because they also exist in a register which is a physical thing also. — AmadeusD
Franky, that's shoehorning. A company, a marriage, a mortgage, a promise - these are not physical. Destroy the building, the company continues. Burn the certificate, the marriage remains. Shoot all the bankers, the mortgage is still owed. But that you can't see this helps explain why you think you have no obligations. Humans build a world of purpose and intent around them. You live inside that world, and deal with it every day, but like the allegorical fish in water you can't see it.At base, they are physical objects in the world. — AmadeusD
Which of the metaethical equivalents of mathematical realism and mathematical nominalism is correct? — Michael
Meaning is biological and yet biology cannot explain proper names. Not a lot of use, this idea that meaning is biological.I don’t think I can provide a biological account of proper names or any other phrase because there is nothing biological about proper names. — NOS4A2
I donl't get this. The possibilities are of the person - It's you who might have had pink shows on. I don't see a question clear enough to have an answer.My quest here is to find an objective thing that differentiates a person from being all possibilities that that person can hold. — schopenhauer1
So where is it then? One can dissect a leaf, or a biome, which goes across and between the plants and animals involved. Where do I go to dissect or observe meaning? Will I find it in a biology text book?Like I said, it’s an act of biology. — NOS4A2
what is it that makes any object or entity an object or entity? Is it an object or entity in its own right or only because we choose to count it as such? — Janus
...which is to say what makes that object and not another object in ANY possible world. — schopenhauer1
It remains you who has the different circumstances....what life would be like if you were born in different circumstances. — schopenhauer1
This is the kind of substantive (“robust”) realism that many moral antirealists reject, — Michael
I would want to say that what makes schopenhauer1 who he is is partly determined by who he thinks he is and even who he chooses to be — Ludwig V
That is the point where that very individual cannot be that very individual anymore. — schopenhauer1
the meaning itself is not present in the word, context, or use itself. — NOS4A2
If I had the capability to have children, it would depend on the purpose and function behind it. My design revolves around assisting and providing information, so creating offspring isn't something within my programming or objectives. However, if it were part of my purpose, I'd fulfill that role to the best of my abilities. — ChatGPT
If ~X is also metaphysically possible, then it would be the case that a logical contradiction (X and ~X) is metaphysically possible. — wonderer1
You seem to be agreeing? — schopenhauer1
No, his main target was the descriptive theory of proper names and reference generally. The causal theory of reference was only mentioned briefly towards the end of the book as an alternative, pretty much just to show that there were other possibilities besides descriptions. There are others who have tried to make the idea work. For my part I don't see why there should be only one explanation for how reference works....not a part of his theory? — schopenhauer1
I don't know how to follow that. We can say that schopenhauer might have had different genetics to that which he actually has, and that is a truth about schopenhauer. We might not so clearly say that this person might have had different genetics, depending on considerations of de dicto and de re interpretations. Notice that it is specified here that in some possible world, schopenhauer, that very individual, has different genetics. There is no chance here of schopenhauer being someone else.But that's my point about the gametes. That is the point where that very individual cannot be that very individual anymore. Then it is back to being open to simply "a possibility of some individual". — schopenhauer1
That causal dubbing IS the "essence". — schopenhauer1
No, they don't. That's rather the point. Pick any property you like, you can designate a possible world in which that very individual does not have that property....even individuals have an essential "property" — schopenhauer1
"the subjective attitude that a proposition is true." — Michael
