If I don't know the author of the book or Trump's wife then I won't know if referring to them as "Steve" or "Melanie" is a mistake or not, — Michael
Surely you can refer to my brother using the name "Andrew" even if his name isn't Andrew. — Michael
It doesn't make a difference if the wrong name is intentional or mistaken. — Michael
Why should all reference have only one explanation? — Banno
It's simply that children are able to use proper names without the advantage of being able to articulate a satisfactory explanation.
How can that be? — Banno
And there is a way of speaking that is not given in a grammar, but shown in conversation.
And there is a way of referring that is not given by definite descriptions or rigid designation; but is shown in what we do with words. — Banno
But the fact that there is a way to learn those rules through being initiated into the practice without the need of explicit instructions doesn't entail that one thereby is learning ineffable rules. — Pierre-Normand
And a conjecture: given any group of rules for successfully using proper names, it is possible to find an instance of successfully use that is not accounted for by that set of rules. — Banno
That a theory is bound to be incomplete is not an injunction against theorizing. That is a very silly thing to think. — Snakes Alive
The purpose of theorizing isn't to provide a blueprint for perfect use. It's rather to foster understanding. Hence, that theories about language use are bound to be incomplete means no more and no less than that our self-understanding, qua language users, is bound to be imperfect. — Pierre-Normand
It's not to provide a blueprint for use at all! — Snakes Alive
that can be objectively described as to its workings. — Snakes Alive
I wrote Plantiga to that effect, but he declined to respond. — Dfpolis
Maybe Pantinga didn't reply to you at the actual world but I'm fairly sure he did at some other possible worlds. — Pierre-Normand
I concede that Kripke's approach may well be useful in metaphysics. Where I don't see it as being useful is in relation to language. To me it seems to bear almost no relation to the way people actually speak to each other, or how people learn to speak. — andrewk
I'm sorry to hear that you feel that way. — andrewk
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