...it is true at all times that Gödel was born on April 28, 1906, for instance. Of course, the sentence now being used to express this truth uses the past tense whereas a sentence used to express it prior to April 28, 1906 would use the future tense. But both sentences express the very same truth and there is no time when what it is that they express isn't true. — Pierre-Normand
Yes, it is true at all times that Gödel was born on April 28, 1906, for instance. — Pierre-Normand
If we can target the search to the entity in order to find a definite description for it, we must not require a definite description beforehand to do the search — fdrake
Every true description of an entity at any time in the form at 'At that time the entity was X' is true at all times. — Janus
Well, I differ here wrt predictions being true at the time of utterance. Bt my lights, they are not able to be.
"Godel was born on April 28, 1906" is not a definite description though, is it? "Born on April 28, 1906..." is, right? If so, then this doesn't clear up what was in question to begin with. — creativesoul
But when a substance falls under a definite description at a time, then it falls under it at all times (including the times when it doesn't exist yet or anymore!) That's what makes it a definite description, rather than a general description. — Pierre-Normand
Does our doing so successfully refer to to the thing? Surely. Can any of it be true? Surely not. Is that mode of reference somehow not existentially dependent upon any description whatsoever? As if we could do any of that without already having picked that thing out of this world by virtue of both description(s) and names?
I think not. — creativesoul
After thinking it through a bit, while it's true that if a definite description applies to something at one point it will apply forever, — fdrake
this does nothing to vouchsafe whether the definite description can actually be used to disambiguate a reference when required.
Examples:
1. Aristotle tutored Alexander the Great.
The DD implied by the Proper Name Aristotle must relate to properties that held around the time of Alexander the Great, whenever that was. — andrewk
When the time is thus specified in the definite description, then, it becomes irrelevant that the item doesn't have the property ascribed to it at other times... — Pierre-Normand
Then it would only follow that the retention of that particular property is not necessary for us to pick it out at other times. Those particular properties are not elemental constituents. — creativesoul
One has to be careful how one sets up counterfactuals, because they usually end up being nonsense, no matter what metaphysics or language philosophy one favours.Are you purporting to defend a form of descriptivism, then? What if the individual who we name "Aristotle" had not become a philosopher, and had become a carpenter instead (and he hadn't been Alexander's teacher, etc.) Are we talking about someone who isn't Aristotle, in that counterfactual scenario? And if we're still talking about Aristotle having had a different career, how it is that "Aristotle" picks up its referent in the couterfactual scenario? — Pierre-Normand
That works for me. It avoids using ill-specified notions like 'referent' or asking (IMHO) meaningless questions such as 'was Aristotle-2 Aristotle?' — andrewk
The purpose of a definite description is to uniquely pick up an individual, not just to pick it up under a description that it will never (and could never) cease to satisfy. — Pierre-Normand
Are what you call "elemental constituents" something akin to essential properties? In that case, the item referred to could not persist though the loss of those properties, but they may still not guarantee that the item is uniquely being described by them since other items of the same essential kind also would have those properties. — Pierre-Normand
One has to be careful how one sets up counterfactuals, because they usually end up being nonsense, no matter what metaphysics or language philosophy one favours. — andrewk
It seems to me that the issue concerning the reidentification of a material particular (or substance) as being numerically the same at two moments in time, in spite of qualitative change, is orthogonal to the issue of the rigidity (or lack thereof) of the referring expressions that are being used to denote it in particular instances. In fdrake's example, the first part stipulates the existence of an individual (i.e. the apple) and assigns some properties to it. Thereafter, it seems to be assumed that this individual has conditions of persistence and individuation such that it can survive some qualitative changes while remaining numerically the same individual. The several occurrences of "it" all pick up the same individual just in virtue of them being used to refer anaphorically to whatever the first singular expression (i.e. the anaphoric antecedent "an apple...") was referring to. That would be true, it seems to me, regardless of the individuation conditions for apples, and regardless of the rigidity of the anaphoric antecedent. — Pierre-Normand
'counterpart'The idea that when we suppose something were some other way, we are not really doing that but positing some 'counterpart' to it..... — Snakes Alive
Although nobody can put themselves in another's head, my confident guess is that that's what counterfactual-using non-philosophers would say if they could be persuaded to spend half an hour discussing it. — andrewk
Yes, it is true at all times that Gödel was born on April 28, 1906, for instance. — Pierre-Normand
This is not to object to what you have said, but to widen its breadth. — Banno
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