This seems to touch on the ship of Theseus paradox. What makes it the case that the ship that left is the same ship that returned (if anything)? I'd say that our conceptual/linguistic imposition (we think about and talk about it as being the same ship) is what makes it the same ship. We model it as being the same ship. As TGW says, we simply stipulate ex hypothesi that it's the same ship. That's all the "essence" there is. — Michael
That sentence conveys no information whatsoever. Can you explain what it means to you or not?I think it means what it says, — The Great Whatever
I suppose we'll find out if it happens. It didn't happen with my interpretation of what 'BO could have spoken Mandarin' means, because you said that my meaning was the wrong one and, in order to know it was the wrong meaning, you must have understood it.What are you going to say? — The Great Whatever
Actually when I look back on the post sequence I see that the verb in question in the discussion of BO and Mandarin was 'imagine if', not 'could have'. The discussion turned to 'could' when you asked if my position was that nothing 'could' be different from how it is. I muddled the two together in that sentence in the last post. I should have either written about imagining BO speaking Mandarin, or alternatively, whether anything in this world could be different from how it is.I know it is the wrong meaning only in the sense that there is an obvious difference between 'Barack Obama could have spoken Mandarin' and 'Someone like Barack Obama in the relevant respects could have spoken Mandarin.' Do you not see a difference, or does this misrepresent your position? — The Great Whatever
Because BO is a process that has a bunch of known properties, one of which is that it doesn't speak Mandarin. Change any one of those known properties, however trivial, and we are talking about a different process (we can talk about alternative unknown properties - such as whether BO will live to 100 - without difficulties, because that is simply a question of what we currently know) . Believers in Aristotelian essences may try to get around that by dividing the properties into essential and non-essential ones. But as I have explained above, I do not accept that approach.Why, in these constructions, would this suddenly change to us referring to someone completely different? Why doesn't the name just refer to who it usually refers to, i.e. Barack Obama? — The Great Whatever
Because BO is a process that has a bunch of known properties, one of which is that it doesn't speak Mandarin. Change any one of those known properties, however trivial, and we are talking about a different process (we can talk about alternative unknown properties - such as whether BO will live to 100 - without difficulties, because that is simply a question of what we currently know) . Believers in Aristotelian essences may try to get around that by dividing the properties into essential and non-essential ones. But as I have explained above, I do not accept that approach. — andrewk
Hence, since one cannot imagine a BO that speaks mandarin (one says one does, but one also says that one laughs one's head off) — andrewk
I have no problem with taking it as idiomatic. But maybe it is literal if we take what is - for me - the most intuitive interpretation of the verb 'imagine', which is to visualise an alternative world. That world can be very different, as in a fantasy novel, or it can be almost identical to this one except that POTUS speaks Mandarin.whereas the counterfactual language we're speaking of is literal and non-idiomatic. — The Great Whatever
First off, there's no what it means 'to you' or 'to me.' There's something the words mean by convention, and you can't arbitrarily decide what that is. There's something you claim it means, but it remains to be seen whether this is right. — The Great Whatever
I have no problem with taking it as idiomatic. But maybe it is literal if we take what is - for me - the most intuitive interpretation of the verb 'imagine', which is to visualise an alternative world. That world can be very different, as in a fantasy novel, or it can be almost identical to this one except that POTUS speaks Mandarin. — andrewk
Does one have to subscribe to an essence-based metaphysics in order to make sense of Kripke's approach to counterfactuals? If so then I suppose that leaves me out. I had to give up in believing in essences decades ago when I realised I just couldn't persuade myself any longer that the small, circular, odourless, tasteless wafer at communion really was the bleeding, crucified body of Christ.
If an essentialist approach is not required, then the question remains: what does it mean to say that a human-like organism in another possible world, that shares many of the properties of the BO of this world, is Barack Obama? Or, more crudely, what is the difference between a BO-like organism in an alternative possible world that is BO, and one that is not? — andrewk
That's where my disagreement with Kripke begins. I don't think we do, or can, speak literally about different Obamas. There is only one POTUS Obama, and he is not fluent in Mandarin. I believe that when people talk about imagining a counterfactual, they are visualising a world identical to this one except for a few specified differences.Kripke's point is that your very ability to speak of two different Obamas..... — StreetlightX
Rather, it is a matter of language: because language functions in this stupid, tautological manner (in which a thing is called what it is because it is called that), rigid designators mark the same thing in all possible worlds. — StreetlightX
The Great Whatever — The Great Whatever
That's where my disagreement with Kripke begins. I don't think we do, or can, speak literally about different Obamas. There is only one POTUS Obama, and he is not fluent in Mandarin. I believe that when people talk about imagining a counterfactual, they are visualising a world identical to this one except for a few specified differences. — andrewk
Whether you're speaking literally or figuratively here is irrelavent though. It's a question of identity conditions. Is the identity of thing qua proper name given by a set of descriptive features? Or are descriptive features irrelevant? Kripke affirms the latter, and then offers a reason why: because we can imagine situations in which every descriptive feature of a thing is replaced, and have the proper name still refer to the thing in question (cf. the thought experiment about Godel and Schmitt, which is alot of fun to read about if you're interested). Kripke makes an argument for this in Naming and Necessity, so it's isn't a case of 'interpreting' willy nilly. What Kripke or the normal person 'means' is not very relevant to the argument at all. Intentionality has got nothing to do with it. — StreetlightX
I wrote a post above along those lines -- that rigid designators are akin to signfiers a la Mill's non-connotative proper names, in which they just represent the law of identity of a particular. — numberjohnny5
Do you then think it makes sense to consider a possible world where the Earth is a star rather than a planet? — Michael
I'm not sure about the relevance of this question - what does this have to do with rigid designation or naming? (honest question, I really don't understand). — StreetlightX
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