One can use them, but they are not the essential, and not the explanation of reference. — Banno
If asked to tell somebody what the book is about I think I would say 'It imagines a world in which the Axis powers won WW2'. Based on recent posts above, it appears that Kripke might say 'It supposes that the Axis powers rather than the Allies won WW2'. — andrewk
My emphasis.I still disagree with this, because i remain unconvinced that anyone can refer to anything without (implicitly, at least) relying on the knowledge of the world that comes either from direct observation or description. — Janus
This misses the point. Indeed, all of those particular items cannot exist without their elemental constituents. — creativesoul
I think it would be way too difficult, given the length of the thread, to dissect the existing thread into reading group and debate. — andrewk
I'm interested in what you said in the first para that 'this is the sort of counterfactual consideration that we rely on when planning future actions or when we are gathering evidence for the existence of causal relations'. I would exclude considering future actions from that because that is usually a case not of imagining the past being different, but rather imagining more than one different possible future, neither of which contradicts current knowledge. — andrewk
Those are not counterfactuals but rather considerations of future possibilities - I call them 'Hypotheticals'. By 'gathering evidence of causal relations' I assume you are referring to the attempt to develop scientific theories. I agree that counterfactuals can play a key role in that but it seems to me that they work perfectly well with my interpretation of counterfactual, and don't require a Kripkean interpretation.
My view on these issues is set out in somewhat more detail in an essay I wrote a couple of years ago: Hypotheticals, Counterfactuals and Probability. Those are still my views. — andrewk
The example that continually comes into my head, unbidden, in this discussion is Philip K Dick's novel 'The Man in the High Castle', — andrewk
BTW you asked above if I was seeking to defend descriptivism. I think I probably am, but that doesn't mean I think it's the best theory. I see Wittgenstein's language game approach as the best explanation of language, including proper names. But despite its faults (which I think are different from those that Kripke claims) I think there's a lot of valuable insight in Russell's theory of descriptions, and I am unable to find any such value in Kripke's theory. — andrewk
But he maintained a relaxed version of what he called Russell's Principle: that a person cannot be thinking about an object unless he knows, in some non-trivial way, which object he is thinking about. — Pierre-Normand
Isn't that the principle or knowledge by/of acquaintance stated another way? — Wallows
Notice that the preceding outline hardly eliminates the notion
of reference; on the contrary, it takes the notion of intending
to use the same reference as a given. There is also an appeal to
an initial baptism which is explained in terms either of fixing a
reference by a description, or ostension (if ostension is not to be
subsumed under the other category)." (Perhaps there are other
possibilities for initial baptisms.) Further, the George Smith
case casts some doubt as to the sufficiency of the conditions.
Even if the teacher does refer to his neighbor, is it clear that he
has passed on his reference to the pupils? Why shouldn't their
belief be about any other man named 'George Smith'? If he
says that Newton was hit by an apple, somehow his task of
transmitting a reference is easier, since he has communicated a
common misconception about Newton.
The deeper point is that even in order to set up a definite description, one must already be able to refer to the individual. Hence reference cannot presuppose descriptions.
Italics - this is important. — Banno
You don't have to know any definite description of Hitler to refer to him, as when you ask who he is. — frank
I wonder if one is referring to anything at all when one asks who somebody is. Such a question typically comes up when one has overheard a conversation that sounds like it is about someone. The temptation is to say that the eavesdropper is asking 'About whom are you talking?' (because while ignorant of history and current events, the eavesdropper is quite particular, in an old-fashioned way, about grammar).You don't have to know any definite description of Hitler to refer to him, as when you ask who he is. — frank
I say that question is the wrong question, and writing dissertations about it misses the point. The right question is 'what does the eavesdropper want?' The answer is that she wants to understand the story that was being told. — andrewk
I feel that my approach is the most natural in the world. — andrewk
Myself, I think Russell's theory of definite descriptions is basically right. — Pierre-Normand
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