In the second quote he's complaining about the problems that arise from using descriptions. What seems to be contingent will turn out to be necessary.
In the second quote he's going to explain how that confusion can be resolved. — frank
If... all known properties of an object are necessary.
This would mean all statements about alternate possibilities are false. — frank
Most statements of that sort(possible worlds) aren't aiming to say something about the nature of the universe, though. Often they're just about logical possibility. — frank
Kripke talks about rigid designators as a way to capture more clearly what we mean by such speech. It's not a philosophical device. He's only using jargon for something that didn't previously have a name.
So in your first quote, he's venturing away from total reliance on descriptions. He doesn't leave description behind entirely and doesn't leave us with a very clear idea where we should draw the line. — frank
Your knowledge of identity comes from your involvement with a community that calls a particular by a certain name. — frank
You know Nixon in the actual world a posteriori. And it's true that we know him by his story. — frank
For me the question would be as to how alternative the story could be without Nixon ceasing to be Nixon. — Janus
I said:don't see an argument pushing in this direction in the first lecture.
Are you jumping ahead? — Banno
That an identity is more than just some ideas about what a name means.
Your knowledge of identity comes from your involvement with a community that calls a particular by a certain name. — frank
Particulars are stipulated though, right? Objects are named. Otherwise, the aforementioned self-contradiction... — creativesoul
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.