The actual-world properties by which we identify the person depend on what our counterfactual is... — andrewk
'John Kennedy' is a rigid designator referring to a particular entity in all possible worlds. 'Jack Kennedy' is also a rigid designator referring to a particular entity in all possible worlds. In this actual world, they are the same entity, which means that 'John Kennedy' and 'Jack Kennedy' mean the same thing. — Isaac
Having the same referent is not equivalent to meaning the same thing... — creativesoul
Unless you've solved the arguments around sense and reference I think what you meant to say was that having the same referent is not necessarily equivalent to meaning the same thing. — Isaac
...you're basically making the point I was trying to make. Two uses of the term 'Nixon' can be used in different senses, and so saying that any use applied to one must apply to the other is not necessarily accurate. — Isaac
The overly simplistic idea that if 'Nixon' means 'the individual named Nixon', then the sentence "Nixon might not have been named Nixon" would be obviously contradictory, relies on both uses of the word 'Nixon' having to have the same sense. I'm just pointing out that they needn't. — Isaac
What is a counterfactual existentially dependent on to successfully refer to it? — Wallows
What is a counterfactual existentially dependent on to successfully refer to it? — Wallows
...John Kennedy' and 'Jack Kennedy' mean the same thing. — Isaac
Not to me."Nixon might not have been named 'Nixon' " is as clear as a bell. — creativesoul
(2) as stated and in isolation, it would be extraordinary for somebody to say it — andrewk
It is not part of normal language, — andrewk
There are certainly longer statements that bear some superficial similarity to it, that one could imagine being used (eg Pat says 'Oh Richard, I do love you and want to marry you, but I wish you had a Scottish name like McGillicuddy instead of plain old Nixon. I always fancied having a long, exotic last name') — andrewk
Perfectly normal? Have you ever heard somebody say such a thing out of the blue?intuitions that perfectly normal sentences are things that we can't analyze for some reason? — Snakes Alive
I find that surprising. But nevertheless I am chuffed to learn that I have that unique honour and I thank you for notifying me.This is the most baffling thing I've ever heard. — Snakes Alive
Perfectly normal? Have you ever heard somebody say such a thing out of the blue? — andrewk
All I can say is that, if you regard that as a perfectly normal sentence when uttered in isolation, your life experience of conversation must have been radically different from mine. — andrewk
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