It just is not, in any intuitive sense of
necessity, a necessary truth that Aristotle had the properties
commonly attributed to him. (p.74)
It would seem that it's a contingent
fact that Aristotle ever did any of the things commonly
attributed to him today, any of these great achievements that
we so much admire...
Hitler might have spent all his
days in quiet in Linz. In that case we would not say that then
this man would not have been Hitler, for we use the name
'Hitler' just as the name of that man, even in describing other
possible worlds. (This is the notion which I called a rigid
designator in the previous talk.)(p.75)
Then what are counterfactuals if not definite descriptions for events that could have happened otherwise? — Wallows
I'm going to retire from this one. I've struggled as much as I can take to set aside the fact that I reject possible world talk(the notions of contingency and necessity to be exact) for completely different reasons than Kripke is offering. — creativesoul
Kripke uses possible world semantics without ever considering what they are existentially dependent upon... there's nothing enlightening about using rubbish as a means for alternative rubbish production. — creativesoul
Kripke uses possible world semantics without ever considering what they are existentially dependent upon. — creativesoul
Kripke uses possible world semantics without ever considering what they are existentially dependent upon... — creativesoul
)"One of the properties, or some conjointly, are believed by A to pick out some individual uniquely,"
with something like (2') "One of the properties, or some conjointly, are believed by someone in the language community to pick out some individual uniquely," — Banno
Or do you suggest that somehow the community as a whole has beliefs? — Banno
No. I'm saying that Nixon is human-shaped in every possible world that contains Nixon. — frank
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