Can you expand on this? It's quite interesting... — Posty McPostface
Yes. Since it's perceptive after all. — NuncAmissa
Yes. It becomes perceptive because these contexts may vary from one individual to another. — NuncAmissa
What are "thinglys" as you describe them? — Posty McPostface
But, ontologically I exist as a concept in your mind made possible through our context of my interactions with you on this forum. — Posty McPostface
The thingly is a concept as you have noted, no?
Why should a name have to refer to a concrete entity in order not to be considered "empty"? — Janus
I mean what possible effective difference could the concrete, as opposed to say fictional, existence of an entity have on the name itself? — Janus
What if a name refers to someone everyone thinks really exists/existed but in fact does not/ did not; would that mean that the name is "empty" (whatever that might mean) even though no one knows that its referent is fictive? — Janus
Yes. And that's the only mode of your existance that's accessible to me. I do think that's not the full extent of your existance, though. — Dawnstorm
Phenomena are things as they appear, and the as-they-appear part is what connects things to concepts, though concepts exist even if no things appear. It's a little messy. — Dawnstorm
It maybe "empty" but not necessarily meaningless. — NuncAmissa
then that would mean that proper names have to have rigid designators to be called proper names in the first place. — Posty McPostface
Do names "have" rigid designators or are they not themselves thought to be rigid designators? — Janus
I agree, and think that Posty McPostface is just a persona on these forums. Nothing more to it given the limitations of this form of communication between us. If I were to meet you in real life, I could tell you my real name. — Posty McPostface
So, the alternative to names being rigid designators is that they have rigid designators? — Janus
About this is what I'm having trouble understanding. Are you saying they're distinct or the same? — Posty McPostface
Okay, let's say I lie so convincingly that you end up thinking my hobby is polishing tomatoes. Since that's a rather unusual hobby you remember it. So we meet, and you say "Ah, you're that guy who's hobby it is to polish tomatoes." You'd be wrong, but you'd be referring to the right person. — Dawnstorm
"Are you Posty McPostface?" is equivent to the question "Are you the person who posts on thephilosophyforum.com under the name Posty McPostface?" It has no other meaning. — Dawnstorm
But you just created meaning right now by referring to the place where I post under the guise of "Posty McPostface". — Posty McPostface
The point is this: as long as I have enough information to identify you, it doesn't matter how accurate my picture of you is. — Dawnstorm
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