They need to know something about Nixon in order to be talking about him. — frank
and somewhere prior to imagining Nixon as a golf ball, we say that couldn't be Nixon? — frank
Perhaps there must be something that links a name to its referent; but it need not be a definite description. — Banno
How do you assess our ability to think of a Nixon with an alternate story, when we know him by his story? — frank
Perhaps there must be something that links a name to its referent; but it need not be a definite description. — Banno
I asked before what it means for a counterfactual to obtain - to be true? — Banno
Metaphysics implies that there might be a possible world where they actually obtain. — Wallows
...without them I could have no idea who or what you are referring to when you say "Nixon" — Janus
While there are those who say that existence in possible worlds must be treated in the same way as existence in the actual world, I am not one, nor, to my reading, is Kripke. — Banno
And yet the folk in my question example, who do not have access to a suitable definite description, ask about Nixon. — Banno
They have to have some idea who Nixon is to ask a question about him. — frank
Perhaps; but they refer to Nixon without the benefit of a definite description, in order to ask who Nixon is. — Banno
My own view is that referring needs no grand philosophical explanation, but is just one of the many things we can do with words — Banno
A definite description is not just any description. It serves to pick out the individual to the exclusion of all other individuals — Banno
I gave a clear example of a question about Nixon in which the questioner did not have access to a definite description of Nixon, but in which they nevertheless referred to Nixon — Banno
The meaning of modal sentences is found in the stipulation that sets them up. — Banno
The question "What else could (it?) mean that a woman or a golf ball in some alternate reality is the same entity as President Nixon in this one?" cannot be readily presented in the Grammar proposed by Kripke. Insofar as that is our topic here, you are off topic. — Banno
I'm not off-topic because all I am asking is how it is established within Kripke's paradigm that we are referring to some entity and no other. — Janus
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