Parents talk about naming their kids all the time, and what names they would have had if such-and-such! — Snakes Alive
And those conversations have context, which makes the meaning clear. That's the whole point. Fish a statement out of its context and stand it up by itself and it becomes ambiguous at best, meaningless at worst.Parents talk about naming their kids all the time, and what names they would have had if such-and-such! — Snakes Alive
Yes, that's a very important factor, to which I devoted considerable thought when wondering in what sort of a counterfactual 'Nixon might not have been named "Nixon" ' could make sense. But its importance requires subtlety and thoughtfulness to spot.Nixon is a family name. It's not a matter of saying I wish I had called my son Nick instead of Dick. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm using the word 'means' is a term to capture both sense and reference in actual use. The question is why is it necessary in the example being used to replace both instances of the term 'Nixon' with the same meaning? — Isaac
"Nixon might not have been named 'Nixon' " is as clear as a bell.
— creativesoul
Not to me.
If I were to hear somebody say such a thing I would ask them what on Earth they were on about. Fortunately, I have never heard anybody say such a thing. — andrewk
The very same statement that is being denied has been used throughout this thread, and in the book that the thread is about. — creativesoul
If I were to hear somebody say such a thing I would ask them what on Earth they were on about. Fortunately, I have never heard anybody say such a thing. And I have only ever seen it written in a context of people arguing over philosophy of language. — andrewk
"Nixon might not have been named 'Nixon' " is as clear as a bell.
— creativesoul
Not to me. — andrewk
You appear to be upset about something I didn't write... — andrewk
(because it involves a name that was not given to the individual in a naming ceremony) — andrewk
I'm not sure what you're referring to here. My best guess is that it's my response to this: In that post you appeared to wrongly attribute to me the sentence 'Nixon might not have been Nixon' and mock it with an eye-roll icon. I asked you not to criticise me for things I didn't write. If I misunderstood your post and it was not intended for me then say so and I will gladly apologise.You critiqued my punctuation of the same string of words. You charged me with slyness regarding this same string of words... — creativesoul
You critiqued my punctuation of the same string of words. You charged me with slyness regarding this same string of words...
— creativesoul
I'm not sure what you're referring to here. — andrewk
The 'Nixon might not have been named Nixon' sentence is a classic example of how analytic philosophy often disappears up its own fundament, by agonising over the meaning of a sentence that nobody would ever use, and claiming that the analysis is somehow relevant to how people do use language. — andrewk
I'm not sure what you're referring to here. My best guess is that it's my response to this: ↪creativesoul In that post you appeared to wrongly attribute to me the sentence 'Nixon might not have been Nixon' — andrewk
No.Part of that critique claims that that is a sentence that nobody would ever use. That's clearly false. We're all using it. — creativesoul
That omission of the quotes on the second 'Nixon' has already been covered. Did you miss it? I said that my understanding of English usage is that quotes can be implied by the context in instances like that. If your experience leads you to conclude that is not common English usage, just mentally put quotes around the second 'Nixon', as that was my intent.You did not put forth an accurate representation of the position you're critiquing. — creativesoul
Saying that something does not make sense is a critique. The aim of the 'to me' part is to leave an open mind for a response that is able to make sense of it by explaining it better. Such a response did not occur.Here's my problem though:
You claimed that that did not make sense to you.
....
How does one validly critique that which does not make sense to one? — creativesoul
No you didn't. You showed how careful punctuation plus insertion of an extra word (the word was 'named') can eliminate what looks like a contradiction. Do you deny that the difference between the two sentences you wrote in that post is more than just punctuation?I simply showed how careful punctuation can eliminate what otherwise looks like a contradiction. — creativesoul
Part of that critique claims that that is a sentence that nobody would ever use. That's clearly false. We're all using it.
— creativesoul
No. — andrewk
The 'Nixon might not have been named Nixon' sentence is a classic example of how analytic philosophy often disappears up its own fundament, by agonising over the meaning of a sentence that nobody would ever use, and claiming that the analysis is somehow relevant to how people do use language. — andrewk
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