It seems to me to be more like a discussion of what he sees as flaws in some historical 'schools of thought'. — creativesoul
it is in virtue of our connection with other speakers in the community,
going back to the referent himself, that we refer to a
certain man.
In
general our reference depends not just on what we think ourselves,
but on other people in the community, the history of
how the name reached one, and things like that. It is by following
such a history that one gets to the reference.
And it's not that one cannot, in the privacy of one's lounge, assign a name to such-and-such. This does happen; but it is the exception. In the vast majority of instances, this is not so. — Banno
N&N killed it. — Banno
You know exactly who I'm talking about, yet you have no idea who I'm talking about. — unenlightened
The definite description of the particular apple you are referring is the one you have given of the whole process of the apple's change from apply freshness to mouldy noxiousness that occurred to that particular apple. Of course, the process might not actually have occurred in your kitchen and you could be referring to a hypothetical apple. You might not even have a kitchen for all I know; in which case you won't have to worry about cleaning it. — Janus
(this will hence be called the paragraph)An apple sits alone in my fruit bowl. Through its process of ageing, its skin turns from green to red in patches, maturing into a uniform red , eventually it begins decaying; the red turns to brown, mould starts to appear and it loses its shape, becoming more black mulch than apple. Its smell changes from barely detectable from range apple scent to the sweetness of rot and alcohol. The process of decay causes it to collapse in on itself. Now it's a pile of smelly mouldy black crap the flies are feasting on. — me
(this will hence be called part 1)An apple sits alone in my fruit bowl. Through its process of ageing, its skin turns from green to red in patches, maturing into a uniform red — fdrake
(this will hence be called the part 2)eventually it begins decaying; the red turns to brown, mould starts to appear and it loses its shape, becoming more black mulch than apple. Its smell changes from barely detectable from range apple scent to the sweetness of rot and alcohol. The process of decay causes it to collapse in on itself. Now it's a pile of smelly mouldy black crap the flies are feasting on.
An apple sits alone in my fruit bowl. Through its process of ageing, its skin turns from green to red in patches, maturing into a uniform red — fdrake
eventually it begins decaying; the red turns to brown, mould starts to appear and it loses its shape, becoming more black mulch than apple. Its smell changes from barely detectable from range apple scent to the sweetness of rot and alcohol. The process of decay causes it to collapse in on itself. Now it's a pile of smelly mouldy black crap the flies are feasting on.
The "it" referring to the fresh apple and the "it" referring to the mouldy apple both refer to the same apple, it seems. The descriptions "fresh' and "mouldy" are not mutually exclusive but part of a greater description that helps to defines that particular apple (time, dates and location are also required). Its whole history is its completed identity. Of course logically. it's history could have been different; in which case its identity would have both been different, and yet the same. It seems there are different senses of 'identity'. The old 'Star Trek transporter accident scenario' where there ends up being two versions of you illustrates this paradox. Which one is you? — Janus
The issue wouldn't arise if time was instantiated linguistically into the sentence. Would it? — Wallows
Wht do they yse the word "saturate"? Is it borrowed from oil painting? — frank
pg. 89
It is true that most of us think that Godel proved the incompleteness of arithmetic. Why is this so? We certainly say, and sincerely, 'Godel proved the incompleteness of arithmetic'. Does it follow from that that we believe that Godel proved the incompleteness of arithmetic - that we attribute the inÂcompleteness of arithmetic to this man? No.
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