Can you expand on this "modal actualizer" thing? — Wallows
So, it is a rigid designator. — Snakes Alive
A rigid designator picks out the very same individual in all possible worlds. But a description might change from world to world. — Banno
A description can be a rigid designator, right? The man who won the election can be a rigid designator. — frank
It’s important here that ‘one meter’ is not introduced as a synonym for ‘the length of the standard meter bar.’ If it were, it would pick out different lengths in different possible worlds. Rather, it is introduced as the name for a particular length, the same in all possible worlds. We identify this length by pointing to the standard meter bar. The meter bar serves to fix the reference of ‘meter’, not to give its meaning. Compare: I hereby dub the island we’re standing on ‘Newlandia’! When you move on to a new island, Newlandia is still the name of the island you were originally standing on. ‘Newlandia’ does not mean ‘the island I am standing on.’ So, it seems to be knowable apriori that the standard meter (if it exists) is 1 meter long, even though this is a contingent fact.
What then, is the epistemological status of the statement ‘Stick S is one meter long at t=0 ’, for someone who has fixed the metric system by reference to Stick S? It would seem that he knows it a priori. For if he used stick S to fix the reference of the term ‘one meter’, then as a result of this kind of ‘definition’ (which is not an abbreviative or synonymous definition), he knows automatically, without further investigation, that S is one meter long. On the other hand, even if S is used as the standard of a meter, the metaphysical status of ‘S is one meter long’ will be that of a contingent statement, provided that ‘one meter’ is regarded as a rigid designator: under appropriate stresses and strains, heatings or coolings, S would have had a length greater than one meter even at t=0 . [NN, p. 56]
By rigid designator, Kripke just means that it denotes the same thing (here, the same length) with respect to every possible situation. Other examples? ‘I am here.’ ‘I am thinking.’ ‘I am this tall’ (putting your hand on your head). — John MacFarlane
First, my argument implicitly concludes that certain general
terms, those for natural kinds, have a greater kinship with
proper names than is generally realized. This conclusion holds
for certain for various species names, whether they are count
nouns, such as 'cat', 'tiger', 'chunk of gold', or mass terms such
as 'gold', 'water', 'iron pyrites'. It also applies to certain terms
for natural phenomena, such as 'heat', 'light', 'sound', 'lightning',
and, presumably, suitably elaborated, to corresponding
adjectives-'hot' , 'loud " , red' .(p.134)
Except that it seems that, even in the real world, it might turn out that the chap we referred to as the inventor of bifocals actually stole the idea from someone else. Perhaps Franklin was not the actual inventor. — Banno
In short, proper names seems to always allow successful reference during hypothetical discourse, whereas descriptions of the thing being named do not. — creativesoul
In short, proper names seems to always allow successful reference during hypothetical discourse, whereas descriptions of the thing being named do not.
— creativesoul
Does not "the present president of the US' unfailingly pick out Trump? — Janus
It’s important here that ‘one meter’ is not introduced as a synonym for ‘the length of the standard meter bar.’ If it were, it would pick out different lengths in different possible worlds. Rather, it is introduced as the name for a particular length, the same in all possible worlds. We identify this length by pointing to the standard meter bar. The meter bar serves to fix the reference of ‘meter’, not to give its meaning. — John MacFarlane
Can't see why that's a problem, considered extensionally. Which is what Kripke is doing. — Banno
Well, I suppose that's the end of that line of thought. — Banno
See p.127. — Banno
No, because that can be used to pick out trump in all possible worlds. We are always necessarily speaking in "this world, at this time" just as texts speak in this world, at the the time of writing...when else? — Janus
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