Achieving almost complete incoherence! Is it the wanting that does not make these not your cornflakes or not your beard? Are possible worlds just a thought? We joke, but I'm serious. Semanticists can create any animal they feel they need for their ow purposes, but as with any errant creativity, their's is subject to disciplines and controls, and being kept in its cage. "Possibility" is possibility, not license. — tim wood
for what is "essential" to the natural kind before it is no longer "that" particular natural kind. — schopenhauer1
AH. Good question. You had best explain the difference, if we are going to proceed. — Banno
Have you ever witnessed something you can't imagine? IOW, do experience and imagination have the same boundaries? — frank
Are you actually imagining that? Or just saying the words? — frank
Hm. I cannot imagine the square root of -1. But I can bring the words together and then manipulate them to produce say a curve or an image of the Mandelbrot set. — Banno
The unfortunate example provided by Kant, and critiqued by Kripke, is that gold is a yellow metal. Now Kripke and Kant would presumably agree that old is a metal - that something purported to be gold but which is not a metal, is not gold. Kant seems to think that this is also true for being yellow; that something purported to be gold, but which is not yellow, would not be gold. Kripke disagrees; and given that colour is a secondary characteristic, Kripke's view seems to me to be the better. — Banno
You like the word really - what is really going on; what the statement really tells us. I'm not so keen. I still do not see how your post explains anything. — Banno
Let me try this: is gold a yellow metal? Is gold any other color? Assuming the answer to these are yes and no respectively, then it seems right to say that if there is gold, then it is a metal and it is yellow, and, if it is either not metal or not yellow, then it is not gold. — tim wood
Hm. I cannot imagine the square root of -1. But I can bring the words together and then manipulate them to produce say a curve or an image of the Mandelbrot set. — Banno
But there can be differences between worlds; so while my cat is all black in this world, in another possible world it might be all white; yet in no possible world is my cat both all black and all white. — Banno
So being yellow is not a necessary characteristic of gold. — Banno
It would seem he was getting at what I was saying above. Things are whatever we say they are.That just looks like an invalid marriage to me. I don't see a philosophical issue here, just a legal one — Banno
but which is not yellow, would not be gold. Kripke disagrees; and given that colour is a secondary characteristic, Kripke's view seems to me to be the better. — Banno
But, I think Kant just missapplied gold when judging with this own theory. Gold being yellow is a posteriori, as Kripke agrees, and synthetic, not analytic. — schopenhauer1
So, when we're talking about this from the a priori context, the answer is "It depends on how you've formulated your concepts." — Terrapin Station
An interesting approach. I like it. — Banno
Was it just a mistake to include "yellow" in the essence of gold? Perhaps if we remove that, we have some agreement between Kripke and Kant. . — Banno
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