Wittgenstein's work shows the poverty of what is here being called "theorising". There's something oddly obtuse in denouncing him for not doing something that he has shown to be an error.In fact, he seems proud that he makes no attempt at theorising. — RussellA
Wittgenstein deals with the first part, but ignores the second. — RussellA
Really? If Thales did not fall down the well, that is a truth about Thales, not about his name.But this is a confusion of a name with an individual, — Leontiskos
yetLaws ought to apply to each and every particular individual, not a set of individuals. — NOS4A2
I do not count companies or any other association as individuals. — NOS4A2
Worker cooperatives need not be imposed. Your' engaging in the fallacy of composition. You've also moved from the claimt hat there isno society to a claim something like that social norms ought not be imposed.It isn’t a voluntary association like people getting together to form a club or company. — NOS4A2
Presumably you would count incorporated companies as individuals?Laws ought to apply to each and every particular individual, not a set of individuals. — NOS4A2
Incorporation in the general sense is voluntary... Socialism isn’t. — NOS4A2
Meh. Of course anyone can purchase shares, and even if the numbers are not public, the process is.But it would be clear only if you knew which investors owned how many shares. — NOS4A2
Yep. What's salient here is the communal nature of certain intentions."Well institutional facts work this way" — schopenhauer1
So you claim, yet "Common ownership" and "public control" are clear enough in the associations listed on the ASX.But the political subject is without a particular referent. — NOS4A2
...the meaning of a particular word is determined by its relationship with the other words within a holistic whole. — RussellA
Indeed, you are. One can't explain aspect perception to someone who only sees the duck.Perhaps I am missing what you are saying — RussellA
The wile of the metaphysician consists in asking 'Is it a real table?' (a kind of object which has no obvious way of being phoney) and not specifying or limiting what may be wrong with it, so that I feel at a loss 'how to prove' it is a real one.' It is the use of the word 'real' in this manner that leads us on to the supposition that 'real' has a single meaning ('the real world' 'material objects'), and that a highly profound and puzzling one. Instead, we should insist always on specifying with what 'real' is being contrasted - not what I shall have to show it is, in order to show it is 'real': and then usually we shall find some specific, less fatal, word, appropriate to the particular case, to substitute for 'real' — Austin
A name is always attached to some thing.
In order to use a name the thing to which it is attached must be identifiable.
The identification of things occurs via description.*
Therefore, names presuppose description. — Leontiskos
Analytic thinking is not monolithic. The detail here is considerable, and the gloss you give above is far from accurate....If everything that is true has to exist... — schopenhauer1
The role of this history leading up to a present use of a name has almost always been neglected by those who accept the principle of identifying descriptions. The sort of description generally mentioned as helping to pick out, say, Thales, is such as 'the Greek philosopher who held that all is water'. Nothing is made of the fact that such descriptions are given by us derivatively. We might be pardoned if we supposed that the referent of 'Thales' is whatever ancient Greek happens to fit such descriptions uniquely, even if he should turn out to have been a hermit living so re- motely that he and hisdoctrines have no historical connection with us at all.
But this seems clearly wrong. Suppose that Aristotle and Herodotus were either making up the story or were referring to someone who neither did the things they said he did nor held the doctrines they attributed to him. Suppose further, however, that fortuitously their descriptions fitted uniquely someone they had never heard about and who was not referred to by any authors known to us. Such a person, even if he was the only ancient to hold that all is water, to fall in a well while contemplating the stars, etc., is not 'our' Thales. — pp. 352-3
You are stuck in empiricism, it seems. Sure, the universe does not consist of two identical iron balls. At issue is not a situation in the world, but how we can describe a situation in different ways, to different ends.. How do the balls get there? You need stars to go supernova to create glass (or iron), right? — Count Timothy von Icarus
What about redescrbing the situation as one ball in two locations?why not go all in and just assume "absolute space and time," to simplify things? — Count Timothy von Icarus
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/descriptions/#MotForRusTheDesI don’t get why Russell structured his logic such that a non existent referent makes the statement false and not vacuously true. — schopenhauer1
Well, one ought be willing to accept the consequences of the structure you propose. So accepting a contradiction leads to explosion, which is not very helpful.you can break up and build up the world in any symbolic way you want! — schopenhauer1
Words which have a use in the language game don't name the thing in the box.
PI 293 - But suppose the word "beetle" had a use in these people's language?—If so it would not be used as the name of a thing. The thing in the box has no place in the language-game at all. — RussellA
The idea is apparently that description is insufficient to account for naming because names are capable of picking out a unique referent whereas descriptions are not. — Leontiskos
...rule following is something we sort of stamp onto certain kinds of events? — frank
