Could you rewrite the OP in plain English? I find modal logic incredibly obtuse. — I like sushi
Not what you’re saying btw, just the whole necessity versus probability stuff. — I like sushi
Do you think that Kripke would argue that the impossibility of de re counterfactuals — Wallows
Now, this all seems to imply in my mind, that it boils down to essentialism, such that de re: "Because Ralph is a schizophrenic because he believes his neighbor is a spy." Whereas de dicto: "Nobody is a spy because Ralph falsely believes his neighbor is a spy due to his (essentialist?) quality of being a schizophrenic." — Wallows
It looks like you are trying to aim Quine at Kripke to see if you can score a hit. Is that right? — Banno
Do you think that Kripke would argue that the impossibility of de re counterfactuals only obtains for rigid designators? — Wallows
As I explained, Ralph cannot validly conclude that his neighbour is a spy, whether he suffers delusions or not is irrelevant. — Metaphysician Undercover
Logic doesn't work that way, it's backward. He must start with the designation, the neighbour is a spy, and proceed logically from there. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, but, doesn't that make it a de facto a de re attitude? — Wallows
If Ralphs believes his neighbor is a spy, then this can only obtain for stipulated worlds where Ralph is paranoid or has some essentialist feature of being a paranoid schizophrenic. Therefore, the rigid designator becomes the fact that Ralph will believe in any possible world where he is not treating his disorder (such as paranoid schizophrenia) and continues to believe in those worlds that the government is out to get him or his neighbour is a spy. — Wallows
Further, in Kripke's account all proper names are rigid designators, while descriptions are non-rigid. — Banno
Now how do you make it into a counterfactual de re attitude? — Metaphysician Undercover
If Ralphs believes his neighbor is a spy, then this can only obtain for stipulated worlds where Ralph is paranoid or has some essentialist feature of being a paranoid schizophrenic. Therefore, the rigid designator becomes the fact that Ralph will believe in any possible world where he is not treating his disorder (such as paranoid schizophrenia) and continues to believe in those worlds that the government is out to get him or his neighbor is a spy.
I don't think that this is an incredulous assumption and one that makes some sense in an essentialist manner? — Wallows
Yes, but, doesn't that make it a de facto a de re attitude? — Wallows
What about the possible worlds in which he is paranoid and thinks his neighbour is one of the alien lizards? — Banno
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