I disagree. It is not only available, but the precise one that the Russellian approach leads us to.The translation you provide of the sentence isn't one available to the Russellian, though — Snakes Alive
A final complication in the semantics for quantified modal logic is worth mentioning. It arises when non-rigid expressions such as ‘the inventor of bifocals’ are introduced to the language. A term is non-rigid when it picks out different objects in different possible worlds. The semantical value of such a term can be given by what Carnap (1947) called an individual concept, a function that picks out the denotation of the term for each possible world. One approach to dealing with non-rigid terms is to employ Russell’s theory of descriptions. However, in a language that treats non rigid expressions as genuine terms, it turns out that neither the classical nor the free logic rules for the quantifiers are acceptable. (The problem can not be resolved by weakening the rule of substitution for identity.) A solution to this problem is to employ a more general treatment of the quantifiers, where the domain of quantification contains individual concepts rather than objects. This more general interpretation provides a better match between the treatment of terms and the treatment of quantifiers and results in systems that are adequate for classical or free logic rules (depending on whether the fixed domains or world-relative domains are chosen). It also provides a language with strong and much needed expressive powers (Bressan, 1973, Belnap and Müller, 2013a, 2013b). — SEP
I suspect that something misleading has happened in Creative's writing.Then we can only "measure" counterfactuals by an accessibility relation to own own world. Therefore how can we assert something as necessarily true in all possible world's? andrewk, @Banno? — Wallows
If you are going to include accessibility in your thinking, then you really must distinguish between what is necessary in all possible worlds and what is necessary in only those worlds that are accessible because of our stipulations. — Banno
Yeah. That just doesn't make sense. — Banno
Why the interest in accessibility, anyway? — Banno
But, you can't stipulate (quantify) without referring back to our own world (instantiation, I think). Can you satisfy accessibility without adherence to our own world? — Wallows
If a thing consists of other things, then it is only by virtue of definite description that we can know that. Our knowledge of composites requires descriptions. In such cases the definite description does not single out a particular unique member of the group. Rather, it picks out a particular kind of group, and nothing else.
Any notion of definite description which requires that it pick out a unique particular individual thing(a single entity) and nothing else is inherently incapable of taking proper account of composites. — creativesoul
All of these things are existentially dependent upon their elemental constituents. — creativesoul
It's putting knowledge of elemental constituents to good use. — creativesoul
It's about existential dependency. — creativesoul
Fuck. What a mess. — Banno
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.