It was for that reason the scenario didn't seem to me to get at the issue of "empty" names as well as other examples. — Mentalusion
That said - and this is a parenthetical issue - I still don't think calling references to fictional entities "empty names" constitutes a category error. It's not the correct use of the concept of a name to be sure, but it's not a category error. It's just wrong. Not everything that's wrong is a category error. — Mentalusion
Of course referring to fictional entites as "empty names" is a category error. — Dawnstorm
"In the philosophy of language, an empty name is a proper name that has no referent.
"The problem of empty names is that empty names have a meaning that it seems they should not have. The name 'Pegasus' is empty;[1] there is nothing to which it refers. Yet, though there is no Pegasus, we know what the sentence 'Pegasus has two wings' means. We can even understand the sentence 'There is no such thing as Pegasus.' But, what can the meaning of a proper name be, except the object to which it refers?"
Of course referring to fictional entites as "empty names" is a category error — Dawnstorm
So there are some physical objects for which it is impossible that they ever be hard, whatever we decide it means to be "hard"? — Mentalusion
W/re to temperature, what I understand it to be essentially is the measure of molecular motion under different conditions and so would not call it either an object or physical — Mentalusion
Of course temperature relates to or "deals with" physical stuff. That doesn't in any way imply that temperature itself is physical (I mean, it might for you b/c you think numbers are physical, but I don't think most people believe that, even math platonists. At any rate, I don't believe it and you've provided no reasons why I should). — Mentalusion
neither is a property of the object(s) being measured, although they do signify that the objects being measured are in a certain kind of unique state. — Mentalusion
The state the objects are in that generates the temperature is not itself "temperature" though. — Mentalusion
If an object by definition is in motion, then you can't measure its change, — Mentalusion
Wel, you think that molecules are physical, right? Do you think that motion is physical? — Terrapin Station
What's the difference between the unique state of the objects being measured and a property of the objects being measured? — Terrapin Station
What is temperature in addition to the state in your opinion? — Terrapin Station
No idea why you'd think that. You measure it relative to something else — Terrapin Station
The word 'physical' often gets thrown around in philosophy, without it ever being made clear what it means. The word has a clear meaning in things like medicine (to distinguish from psychological) and finance (to distinguish from financial derivatives) and has a practical use in those disciplines. But I have yet to see either a clear meaning or a use for it in philosophy.That doesn't in any way imply that temperature itself is physical — Mentalusion
? Not that I agree with the idea of "empty names" in the first place (as I stated earlier, I think the whole notion of there being a problem stems from misconceived theories of reference), but names for fictional characters are often given as an example. Why would that be a category error then? — Terrapin Station
I think it would be more accurate to ask whether referring to names that reference fictional entities as "empty" constitutes a category error. And, as I said, it may be wrong to say that, but it's not a category error. Even if what you mean by "empty name" is a name that designate nothing and further assume that, by definition, all names designate unique objects (leaving aside paradoxes about referring to non-being), it's still not a category error. It would be like asking "are all primes are divisible by 2?" The statement is wrong analytically, but it's not a category error because "being divisible by 2" is still a property that belongs to numbers and so is within the same category as primes. Similarly, talking about empty names is wrong - and wrong analytically - on certain reasonable assumptions about how names work, but it is still in the category of a linguistic claim so not a category error. — Mentalusion
I don't see anything in the definition that commits one necessarily to believing that motion is something physical or itself an object. — Mentalusion
How can you measure an object's change in time if by definition its always changing? — Mentalusion
An interesting discussion can be had in that direction, given wave-particle duality and that the closer we look at things, the more they are waves or fields rather than 'stuff'. But it's not that close to the issue under discussion so, on reflection, perhaps it's better left for another thread.I'm not sure it's really all that important but at the most general level I use it to distinguish things from other things that are not physical. That is, I think it signifies what is material, made of stuff, has 3 or 4D extension, etc. — Mentalusion
You're thinking that changing = disappearing??? — Terrapin Station
However, because objects are in motion by definition, that means that at time t1 O1 will be in position x2 at t2, since motion is defined as an objects change in position over time. — Mentalusion
That's why I wrote this above: "*understanding that I'm using 'object' loosely, so that it can refer to dynamic interactions of parts, such as molecules." — Terrapin Station
it seems to me that to think of objects as dynamic by nature is going to lead to a lot of confusion. — Mentalusion
- the fact that it is nonsensical is exactly my point. That's how a reductio works.That part is nonsensical. — Terrapin Station
Next,"at time t1 01 will be in position x2 at t2" is just an ungrammatical mess that reads incoherently. — Terrapin Station
A time-slice being a "point" is just an abstraction we make. — Terrapin Station
what time is in the first place is motion or change. — Terrapin Station
The argument in the first place was related to the above where you appear to identify objects with dynamic interactions — Mentalusion
True, but it seems to be useful and implicit the definition of motion. Since there's no alternative definition of motion on the table, it would appear we're stuck with time slices — Mentalusion
the change the object undergoes will not be "dynamic" since the only change relevant is the "being" in one place rather than another. — Mentalusion
Motion is simply movement relative to something else. — Terrapin Station
?? "Dynamic" refers to changing. So if it's changing somehow (from one place to another), it's dynamic. — Terrapin Station
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