However what would this approach look like if there was agreement when one is using propositions and one is using purely grammar- when one is looking how we understand the world using propositions, and one is using how we understand names using modal logic? — schopenhauer1
Was it just a mistake to include "yellow" in the essence of gold? Perhaps if we remove that, we have some agreement between Kripke and Kant. .
— Banno
I think it was, especially keeping in mind the definition of analyticity and with Kripke's further critique using modal logic. — schopenhauer1
Only, I'm going to follow Davidson and say that incommensurability is not an option. If two groups of ideas don't meet well, then one or both of them are wrong. — Banno
Yoohoo! Depends on a careful definition of what Kant meant by "yellow," don't you think? You can play with this all you want but the substantive issues don't go away. — tim wood
However, you can correct me where you think I misapply Kant. — schopenhauer1
Eh? Really? There's gold that's not yellow (or "gold" as Banno would have it)?If it wasn't yellow, it wouldn't make it any less "gold". — schopenhauer1
Eh? Really? There's gold that's not yellow (or "gold" as Banno would have it)? — tim wood
Which Kant was careful to make clear and document. — tim wood
But we do know gold is an element. AU, then, is AU wherever in the universe you go, in those places where there is gold (maybe none in some places in the universe, maybe where atoms cannot exist). That leaves the question, what does "gold" mean in the context of APW and PWS. My answer: it doesn't mean anything in those worlds because they're just conjectural worlds concocted to test certain logical propositions. Which means in brief, you can't get theah from heah, and you cant get heah from theah, as Bert says to Ernie. And "existence" in any such world does not imply existence in ours. — tim wood
The question for me is, if ɸ is a priory, is ɸ also necessary? — Banno
So on your account, some things can be a posteriori and yet necessary - agreeing with Kripke. Gold having an atomic number of 79 being one of these.
And further, gold having atomic number 79 is synthetic; it brings together two distinct concepts, atomic number and gold, or if you prefer the phenomenological experience of gold.
Or do we take the discovery of gold to be analytic, post hoc? The very idea of gold contains within it the idea of atomic number 79; to be gold is to have atomic number 79; only we needed to do some experiencing in order to learn this...
Or does this whole structure of a priori/a posteriori and synthetic/analytic fall apart on analysis?
AND is being a priory the same as being necessary? — Banno
AND is being a priory the same as being necessary? — Banno
So on your account, some things can be a posteriori and yet necessary - agreeing with Kripke. Gold having an atomic number of 79 being one of these. — Banno
And further, gold having atomic number 79 is synthetic; it brings together two distinct concepts, atomic number and gold, or if you prefer the phenomenological experience of gold. — Banno
So we have a necessary synthetic statement: gold has atomic number 79. — Banno
Or do we take the discovery of gold to be analytic, post hoc? The very idea of gold contains within it the idea of atomic number 79; to be gold is to have atomic number 79; only we needed to do some experiencing in order to learn this... — Banno
Or does this whole structure of a priori/a posteriori and synthetic/analytic fall apart on analysis? — Banno
Kripke was concerned with names. That is the main point we must not forget with him. — schopenhauer1
For example, "The definition of gold is a metallic yellow substance" doesn't hold up. In another possible world, metallic, yellow, and substance might not be how to describe gold, but gold would still somehow retain its goldness in those worlds. — schopenhauer1
Question: What does, "all possible worlds" mean?
And, does logical necessity imply existential necessity when applied to analytic a priori judgments? — tim wood
So. There are "possible worlds" where Banno isn't Banno. Of course, to be relevant, that Banno must be Banno. If not, then why would we think that the Banno in the other "possible world" that isn't Banno is Banno. In that world he may just be a cruller. If he is a cruller in that world, why would we think he is Banno. And if he is Banno, then the assumption that there are "possible worlds" where he isn't Banno collapses. Which means he is Banno. So Banno is Banno in all possible worlds. Which applies mutis mutandis to everything in all possible worlds. So there is no possible world wherein there is something that is not, in this world. Hmm. — tim wood
It is necessary that a priori knowledge is necessary. — Metaphysician Undercover
We must be careful not to equivocate between these two senses of necessity, and I think Kant's categories may create ambiguity. His, are probably not the best that could be drawn.. — Metaphysician Undercover
Add one. But even stating with "one", simple unity, is to take an empirically induced principle. If we do not start with one, what sort of rule for counting could we produce? — Metaphysician Undercover
Banno is indeed Banno in every possible world in which I exist. In no world am I a doughnut, a fruit cake or anything other than human. Although in some worlds my name is Tim Wood. I am not Banno in all possible worlds, since one can posit a possible world without me in it. — Banno
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