Yes that's right and you only know that by ostention and/ or description which has been my point. — Janus
Perhaps we don't need to go as far as the golf ball. Could Nixon still be Nixon if he had had different parents and also looked completely different or was a woman, for example? — Janus
So how do we separate the name 'Nixon' and its referent from the associated definite descriptions of the referent; 'the man who had these biological parents', 'the entity who was a man' and so on? — Janus
Kripke doesn't suggest that we ever do that. — frank
If you speak about alternate Nixons, are you thinking of it spacially in that way? Or do you imagine this universe as a script, and think of a re-write? Or what? — frank
Reference? I think it's more about identity. If I write about an alternate Nixon, I shouldn't have any problem picking out which character in my story is Nixon. If you read my story and have difficulty, that means I suck at writing....but as far as I understand Kripke wants to separate the idea of reference from any dependence on definite description — Janus
It's not a precise science. — Janus
Reference? I think it's more about identity. If I write about an alternate Nixon, I shouldn't have any problem picking out which character in my story is Nixon. If you read my story and have difficulty, that means I suck at writing. — frank
It's not a precise science. — Janus
Kripke agrees. — frank
You can write about (in the sense of stipulate that you are writing about) an alternative Nixon, but does that character have some ineliminable relation to the actual Nixon — Janus
Kripke wants to separate the idea of reference from any dependence on definite description. — Janus
It also seems that he's using modality(possible world semantics) as a means to argue this... — creativesoul
I think it amounts to the difference between the meaning of a name and a name as identity. He actually has a few examples where a description is clearly inadequate for identity. — creativesoul
I would say yes. — frank
It also seems that he's using modality(possible world semantics) as a means to argue this...
— creativesoul
But, if every name is a rigid designator, then we're left with necessary existents that instantiate necessity. How do you deal with this? — Wallows
I'm not sure that every name is a rigid designator for Kripke. Proper names are what he's dealing with... I think. — creativesoul
Assume he is talking about every name, for the sake of argument...
What do you mean "we're left with necessary existents that instantiate necessity"? — creativesoul
No. In any possible world that includes Nixon, there are characteristics essential to him. He has to be human-shaped, for instance. He can't be a golf ball.No matter how attenuated the fictional characters connection (in terms of description) to the real Nixon is? Are you thinking it is so simply on the basis that you (the author) think of your character as being somehow an alternate version of Nixon? — Janus
That would suggest that I'm straying either from facts about Nixon or logical possibility.Would it matter if others found the identity connection unconvincing? — Janus
I think it amounts to the difference between the meaning of a name and a name as identity. He actually has a few examples where a description is clearly inadequate for identity.
— creativesoul
By "name as identity" do you mean "name as identifier". The problem I see is that many people can have the same name, and when we use a name to refer to someone we need supplementary descriptions (unless we are right there in which case pointing (ostention) will suffice) to enable us to identify who the name is being used to refer to.
Of course I agree that a description or any set of descriptions is "adequate for identity" but a description may be adequate for identification. — Janus
Well, what "structures the world" according to my reading of Kripke are necessary existents. That's all I meant by it. — Wallows
...When we think of a property as essential to an object we usually mean that it is true of that object in any case where it would have existed. A rigid designator of a necessary existent can be called strongly rigid...
...a property can meaningfully be held to be essential or accidental to an object independently of its description...
..A much worse thing, something creating great additional problems, is whether we can say of any particular that it has necessary or contingent properties, even make the distinction between necessary and contingent properties. Look, it's only a statement or a state of affairs that can be either necessary or contingent ! Whether a particular necessarily or contingently has a certain property depends on the way it's described...
Evidently there's a meaningful distinction to be drawn and maintained between particulars and objects? — creativesoul
Evidently there's a meaningful distinction to be drawn and maintained between particulars and objects?
— creativesoul
I don't think so. He meant any particular thing. — frank
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