It is redundant for you to say that to yourself because you already know it, so why say it?Even if I know that Donald Trump is the President of the United States, it doesn't follow that "Donald Trump is the President of the United States" is redundant. — Michael
They refer to the same person and mean the same thing presently. They don't refer to the same person, or mean the same thing, when Obama was President."Donald Trump" and "the President of the United States" refer to the same person, but they don't mean the same thing. The meaning of a word/phrase is not the same thing as its referent. — Michael
I'm not necessarily disagreeing, but I have two questions (which are related): a) are you claiming that one can know the Fregean reference solely by virtue of knowing the meaning of the relevant predicates? (which clearly you can't since you cannot know apriori whether "Caesar" and "the conqueror of Gaul" denote the same person) — Fafner
and b) Is "the conqueror of Gaul" a rigid designator on your account? Because if it is not (and it is plain that it isn't) then I think your criteria for the non-identity of 'x' and 'y' (in the quote) becomes vacuous. Because consider that it is a contingent fact that "Caesar" and "the conqueror of Gaul" denote the same person (and you can further substitute 'Caesar' with another description to eliminate all names); but this you can know only aposteriori, so it means that on your criteria 'x' and 'y' (if 'x' and 'y' are definite descriptions) denote the same entity if their terms happen to denote the same entity, and of course everyone will agree with that...
Secondly, my claim was that the two events are numerically distinct by dint of the predicates "...died" and "...was murdered" referring to different sorts of actions/processes regardless of anyone's knowledge of the references of those predicates. — Pierre-Normand
I think the case being discussed, and the implicit surrounding narratives, can be further filled up in such a manner as to warrant either one of the two intuitions depending on the kind of 'sortal concept' (or rather, the kind of 'event- or process-form', for the category of events) that most perspicuously attaches to the events being talked about and thereby determines their criteria of persistence and individuation. — Pierre-Normand
The issue is ontological and not directly tied with issues of knowledge or reference. — Pierre-Normand
My uses may be idiosyncratic, but they are not private, by dint of their being uses of language at all. — StreetlightX
At a minimum one would have to grant that the phrases and gestures have a grammar particular to them (such that there would be different kinds of lexemes employed), and that this grammar would be transposable to other words or gestures that could belong to that same language — StreetlightX
What would lead me to think the criterion had been met in this case? — Srap Tasmaner
That one must translate, say, Japanese into English for you to understand does not entail the rather absurd conclusion that Japanese 'cannot be isolated from English'. And what I did above was no different to translation. — StreetlightX
You're mistaken if you think I've missed that. In fact my entire point has been that there is no genuinely private use in the sense that even your 'private' ( 'private' only insofar as they might involve you and no one else) examples obviously rely on conventional public usage for them to have any meaning even to you. — John
the examples you gave are completely meaningless unless they are given meaning as being equivalents to words as conventionally used in some language or other. — John
Thinking of this as a "more complete description" led me almost immediately to the concern you noted, that I would need to posit "fully determinate facts" at the head of such sets, and that seems a bit dubious. — Srap Tasmaner
They aren't irrelevant unless you are saying that your post I was asking questions about was also irrelevant.Because you are asking many irrelevant things, and life is too short (and anyway, I don't understand most of your questions). — Fafner
these criteria must be 'lived', and the only thing that that guarantees their uptake (or not) is the 'form-of-life', the 'whirl of organism' in which they operate. Meaning is use means: look at the practices in which language is embedded in ("the speaking of language is part of an activity, or of a form of life"), and language or meaning cannot be grasped apart from that activity — StreetlightX
Incidentally, it is just this rarefied, intellectualist, and 'thin' approach to language - in which meaning can only ever find its ground in more language ("meaningless... unless they are given meaning as being equivalents to words..."), shorn of any reference to human practice, lived context, and worldly action - in short, the entire order of the performative — StreetlightX
If I had some cake, and you were in the same room as me, and neither of us could speak to each other in terms other than in my made-up-on-the-spot language (assuming I was consistent with grammar), I wager you'd 'get' my invitation to eat cake eventually (this would be the 'rough ground' of language - life and it's being lived, language bound up with action - that secures meaning). This is how we teach children, no? Does it matter if we teach them with an already-established - i.e. conventional - language, or not? — StreetlightX
Two things can be wrong with an argument: it is logically invalid (the conclusion doesn't follow from the premises), and/or one or more of its premises is false. Everything else is irrelevant as far as the soundness of an argument goes.What does it mean to not address your arguments? What does it mean to have something wrong or right with your argument? — Harry Hindu
But the most important word in here is "consistent." What you teach someone when you teach them a language, the practice you invite them to join, is precisely the consistent and regular actions (not only the utterances, but the matching of utterance to occasion, and so on) that constitute its use, in short, its conventions. No regularity, no convention, and no language. — Srap Tasmaner
This is a tough sell because it's extremely difficult to imagine the "no other terms" part. I think we all reach in our minds for some foundational gestures we pretend are transparent and self-grounding. — Srap Tasmaner
But by claiming ... that a few strings and gestures and their translated meanings is all it takes to have a language — Srap Tasmaner
But what does it mean to be false?Two things can be wrong with an argument: it is logically invalid (the conclusion doesn't follow from the premises), and/or one or more of its premises is false. Everything else is irrelevant as far as the soundness of an argument goes. — Fafner
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