If they "come to mind", how are they not concepts?Interrogatives, exclamatives, proper nouns, and imperatives come to mind — StreetlightX
What would you say if I attributed supreme prudence to my grandmother's nature, which is an ontological statement, and then claimed in the same breath that she doesn't embody the word itself, as that would be mere semantics. Could it be argued that she is still defined to be the concept of prudence? — Aleph Numbers
Are words identical to concepts? I'm inclined to think not, but I don't have any evidence. And if they aren't identical what makes them different? — Aleph Numbers
I'm ascribing supreme prudence to my grandmother who, being supremely prudent in nature, issues supremely prudent commands (wash one's hands, look both ways before crossing the street, etc.) The question here is: if my grandmother's full nature is that of supreme prudence, as a property, and the property is a presupposition of her commands too, then it seems that her nature is the same thing as the source of her commands. This seems to eliminate any agency on the part of my grandmother; she is just a tool for relaying her own nature. — Aleph Numbers
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