In one sense it tells us that there is nothing more to say about red; given the domain is only the beads, red just is {1,2,3}.
I agree that there is something annoying here, but I suspect that it cannot be well articulated. — Banno
Perhaps bead eight is square. In that case, and given that our domain is just the beads, "...is square" and '...is eight" are extensionally equivalent, and whatever is extensional the case with square things will be extensively the case with bead eight.Would you want to say that the extension of Square X simply is what we mean by (or define as) a square? — J
Perhaps bead eight is square. In that case, and given that our domain is just the beads, "...is square" and '...is eight" are extensionally equivalent, and whatever is extensional the case with square things will be extensively the case with bead eight.
So it does not look as if the choice of red is an issue. — Banno
Quine rightly dismissed the analytic/synthetic distinction as too vague, — Banno
If we suppose a prior inventory of logical particles . . . then in general a logical truth is a statement which is true and remains true under all reinterpretations of its components other than the logical particles. — Two Dogmas, section 1
Obervation sentences are stimulus-synonymous for a speaker if their stimulus meanings are the same for him. But whereas one’s stimulations and their ranges are a private affair, stimulus synonymy makes sense socially. Sentences are stimulus-synonymous for the community if stimulus-synonymous for each member. This still does not work between languages, unless the community is bilingual. — Quine, Pursuit of Truth
I'm not seeing a difference. Won't you also have to explain what a side and an angle are? How would you do that? Is your point that red is a simple and square, a construction? Is "angle" a simple or a construct? What about "side"? — Banno
Wittgenstein already won this particular game by pointing out that it is not so much what we say as what we do that is of import. — Banno
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