His table, for example, could only have been made from that certain piece of wood, and if it had been made from some other piece of wood, it would be a different table. — Banno
While his account for him is metaphysical, I'm reading him as providing rules for modal discourse - a grammar, in the broader sense.
So I guess you might read him as saying that the substance an individual is made of is essential to that individual. — Banno
I would think of that as too broad, though. For example a waterfall is an individual that does not always consist of the same substance. — Banno
One of the costs involved is that individuals are more fixed than was thought, across our modal musings. Specifically, a proper name fixes one individual across all accessible possible worlds in which that individual exists. An implication of this is that, since a definite description that fixes an individual in the actual world might turn out to be false, or be stipulated to be false, then the theory that the meaning of a name is given by an associated description is bunk. — Banno
As far as I know, he is correcting the idea that proper names and kinds are just placeholders for descriptions using modal logic. — schopenhauer1
I would imagine using modal logic is like the definition of deductive reasoning, — schopenhauer1
Is he offering a proposal for a recommended way to use language? — Terrapin Station
I don't think proper names can be descriptions in modal logic. — schopenhauer1
I am yet to see anyone provide a cogent logical distinction between 'X' and 'the entity referred to as 'X'' in everyday use. — Janus
but, what I think has been going on in the other thread is conflating a name's sense with its reference. — Wallows
thus you can't separate the sense (or the sum total of descriptive content for an empty name) from a non-existent referent. — Wallows
Or to sound nonsensical, the description of the empty name stands in for the designation of the term, much how like the "It" in the sentence of "It is raining", is a dummy subject/indexical and not a real one. — Wallows
Some topics essential to a full presentation of the viewpoint argued here, especially that of existence statements and empty names, had to be omitted altogether. — Kripke, Naming and Necessity, Lecture I, footnote 1
I am not sure what you are thinking here, Wallows, but I would certainly like to see a coherent and consistent resolution to that! — Janus
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