The complete paragraph containing item 4) is:
It seems to me obvious that the only rational approach to such problems would be the
following: We should reconcile ourselves with the fact that we are confronted, not with one
concept, but with several different concepts which are denoted by one word; we should try to make these concepts as clear as possible (by means of definition, or of an axiomatic procedure, or in some other way); to avoid further confusions, we should agree to use different terms for different concepts; and then we may proceed to a quiet and systematic study of all concepts involved, which will exhibit their main properties and mutual relations.
How is this paragraph about the meaning of true. The word "true" isn't mentioned. ? — RussellA
It is remarkable that you say that. It is quite an example of willfully ignoring a mass of context. 'truth' or 'true' are mentioned
15 times in the section in which that paragraph is in the middle.
[begin quote; bold and italics added]
14. IS THE SEMANTIC CONCEPTION OF
TRUTH THE "RIGHT" ONE?
***The subject of this section is whether the semantic conception of
truth is the only right one.
I should like to begin the polemical part of the paper with some general remarks.
I hope nothing which is said here will be interpreted as a claim that the semantic conception of
truth is the "right" or indeed the "only possible" one. I do not have the slightest intention to contribute in any way to those endless, often violent discussions on the subject: "What is the right conception of
truth?" I must confess I do not understand what is at stake in such disputes; for the problem itself is so vague that no definite solution is possible. In fact, it seems to me that the sense in which the phrase "the right conception" is used has never been made clear. In most cases one gets the impression that the phrase is used in an almost mystical sense based upon the belief that every word has only one "real" meaning (a kind of Platonic or Aristotelian idea), and that all the competing conceptions really attempt to catch hold of this one meaning; since, however, they contradict each other, only one attempt can be successful, and hence only one conception is the "right" one.
*** We're not getting in arguments premised on the view that there is only one right concept of
truth.
Disputes of this type are by no means restricted to the notion of
truth. They occur in all domains where - instead of an exact, scientific terminology - common language with its vagueness and ambiguity is used; and they are always meaningless, and therefore in vain.
*** The concept of
truth is not the only subject over which there are such arguments. When the subject matter is not exact enough, there are such arguments.
It seems to me obvious that the only rational approach to such problems would be the following: We should reconcile ourselves with the fact that we are confronted, not with one concept, but with several different concepts which are denoted by one word; we should try to make these concepts as clear as possible (by means of definition, or of an axiomatic procedure, or in some other way); to avoid further confusions, we should agree to use different terms for different concepts; and then we may proceed to a quiet and systematic study of all concepts involved, which will exhibit their main properties and mutual relations.
*** In situations where a word is used to denote more than one concept, we should agree to use different words.
Referring specifically to the notion of
truth, it is undoubtedly the case that in philosophical discussions - and perhaps also in everyday usage - some incipient conceptions of this notion can be found that differ essentially from the classical one (of which the semantic conception is but a modernized form). In fact, various conceptions of this sort have been discussed in the literature, for instance, the pragmatic conception, the coherence theory, etc.
*** There have been a lot of different concepts of
truth.
It seems to me that none of these conceptions have been put so far in an intelligible and unequivocal form. This may change, however; a time may come when we find ourselves confronted with several incompatible, but equally clear and precise, conceptions of
truth. It will then become necessary to abandon the ambiguous usage of the word "
true," and to introduce several terms instead, each to denote a different notion. Personally, I should not feel hurt if a future world congress of the "theoreticians of
truth" should decide - by a majority of votes - to reserve the word "
true" for one of the non-classical conceptions, and should suggest another word, say, "frue," for the conception considered here. But I cannot imagine that anybody could present cogent arguments to the effect that the semantic conception is "wrong" and should be entirely abandoned.
*** There could be competing concepts of
truth that are all just as rigorous. In that case, we would oblige by using a word other than '
truth'.
[end quote]
Yes, the concept of denote itself is one of those that has differing views. But that's not Tarski's point. Rather his point is that, among concepts having differing views, the concept of truth is in particular one of them. The section is not about what we mean by 'denote' but about the concept of truth and the word 'truth' and the fact that the word 'truth' denotes different things for different people. Especially, Tarski is not at all saying he uses the word 'denote' in different ways.
/
I have never said that Tarski was concerned with literary criticism. — RussellA
Yes, and I didn't say that you did. It's my point that he wasn't discussing literary criticism; and dragging Umberto Eco into this is quite aside understanding Tarski.
Within the article he wrote:
Semantics is a discipline which, speaking loosely, deals with certain relations between
expressions of a language and the objects (or "states of affairs") "referred to" by those expressions. As typical examples of semantic concepts we may mention the concepts of
designation, satisfaction, and definition as these occur in the following examples:
the expression "the father of his country" designates (denotes) George Washington; snow satisfies the sentential function (the condition) "2 is white"; the equation "2 . x = 1" defines (uniquely determines) the number 1/2. — RussellA
Yes, and 'denotes' there is in the sense you've been told about in this thread.
I haven't said that Tarski was not concerned with mathematical logic. I pointed out that Tarski had a concern with the semantic conception of truth, and the semantic conception of truth is not the same as the mathematical conception of truth. — RussellA
Wow. You miss the very central point of his articles. Tarski is concerned with providing a rigorous mathematical formulation of the adjective 'is true'. Read the articles.
Are you saying that the ordinary sense of the word "denote" is the mathematical sense of the word "denote" ? — RussellA
When Tarski is using everyday examples, he uses the everyday sense of 'denote'. Then he goes on to make it even more rigorous mathematically.
It is a simple idea until one considers how "a unicorn" maps to a unicorn, or "beauty" maps to beauty. — RussellA
Tarski talks about the fact that in everyday situations we don't have precision. He says that he does not claim to provide an explication of the concept of truth that can withstand all the vagaries of natural language. Nor does he claim to explicate the notion of 'denote' that can withstand whatever disagreements there may be among different settings.
I am pointing out, as Umberto Eco pointed out, that the meaning of "denote" is far more complex than as used in the ordinary sense of "a cat" denotes a cat. — RussellA
Of course it can be as complex as one wants it to be. But Tarski starts with an ordinary intuitive sense and then goes on to pin it down for more rigorous contexts. Read his articles.
/
In sum:
(1) Tarski's overriding concern is with defining 'is true' in context of formal languages for mathematics and the sciences.
(2) He uses an ordinary sense of 'denote' (or cognates of 'denote), but then moves on to instead specify the method of formal modals, where 'denote' is subsumed by certain kinds of functions from linguistic objects to model theoretic objects. This is the movement from informal semantics to formal semantics that Tarski provides.
(3) Whether 'snow is white' is analytic or not is not part of Tarski's concern in the two articles. Moreover, as pointed out: Whether 'snow is white' is analytic depends on which definition of 'snow' we're looking at. There are common enough definitions in with 'white' is not in the differentia.