I see that you are confused about the most basic aspects of mathematics, language and reasoning. On certain points, your understanding is not even at the level of a six year old child. I'm offering you help here, though I doubt you'll take it in. — GrandMinnow
I'm offering you help here, though I doubt you'll take it in. — GrandMinnow
'2+1' denotes the result of the operation — GrandMinnow
You got it exactly backwards. Our method does not lead to '2+1' denoting infinitely many things. '2+1' denotes exactly one thing. On the other hand, 2+1 is denoted infinitely many ways:
2+1 is denoted by '2+1'
2+1 is denoted by '3'
2+1 is denoted 'sqrt(9)'
2+1 is denoted by '((100-40)/3)-17'
etc. — GrandMinnow
If we want to know how much a company did in sales, the accountant starts by seeing that the company got 500 dollars from Acme Corp., and 894 dollars from Babco Corp, and 202 dollars from Champco Corp. Then the accountant reports:
500+894+202 = 1596 — GrandMinnow
One wouldn't honestly claim to know that the equation is true until one worked it out that it is true. Or to find a right side without '+' in it, then first one might have to perform the addition on the left side. This doesn't vitiate anything I've said. — GrandMinnow
all you've offered is inconsistency — Metaphysician Undercover
What denotes that the operation has a result? — Metaphysician Undercover
Would you agree that a finite operation is distinct from an infinite operation — Metaphysician Undercover
2+1 demotes exactly nothing then — Metaphysician Undercover
infinity of different things referred to by on signification — Metaphysician Undercover
what makes 2+1 different from 3+1 then? — Metaphysician Undercover
The accountant writes out 500+ 894+202=?, or x — Metaphysician Undercover
it were like you say, that "500+ 894+202" already says 1596, then the accountant would not have to sum up the numbers — Metaphysician Undercover
equations contain unknowns — Metaphysician Undercover
If "2+1" says sqrt(9), how is there any need to work out any equivalencies? — Metaphysician Undercover
The term itself doesn't denote that it has a result. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The usage "result of an operation" is an informal way of referring to the value of the function for the arguments. — TonesInDeepFreeze
For a while, in order not to split hairs, I went along with your term 'process', even though you have not defined it. That was okay for a while, but I was concerned that it would cause confusion, since there are actually two different notions: (1) a function. (2) a procedure for determining the value of a function applied to an argument. (I did touch on this earlier.)
So I'm not going to go along with your undefined terminology 'process'. Instead I'll use 'operation' (meaning a function) and 'procedure' (meaning an algorithm). — TonesInDeepFreeze
Do you even know what the use-mention distinction is? I — TonesInDeepFreeze
There are an infinite number of ways to refer to the number 3. That doesn't mean they don't refer! Your argument is so daft! — TonesInDeepFreeze
No he doesn't. If he does, he's wasting precious billable seconds. Instead, he just goes ahead to add the numbers. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Are you serious? Are you trolling? — TonesInDeepFreeze
No, the term '500+ 894+202' already denotes 1596. — TonesInDeepFreeze
It's just that the accountant doesn't know that until he performs the addition. The term doesn't start denoting only upon the knowledge of the account. The term doesn't spring into denotation every time some human being or computer somewhere in the world does a calculation. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Now you're pretending to be someone else, so that your inconsistency is not so glaring. — Metaphysician Undercover
You distinctly said "2+1" refers to "a procedure for determining the value of a function applied to an argument." — Metaphysician Undercover
what in the expression "2+1" denotes that there is a result — Metaphysician Undercover
A function is a process. — Metaphysician Undercover
Grand Minnow kept insisting that "2+1" does not signify a process. That's why I say there is inconsistency. — Metaphysician Undercover
But clearly an "operation" or "function" is a process, and that's what is signified with "+". — Metaphysician Undercover
The "value" of the function is not signified, because it must be figured out by carrying out the operation — Metaphysician Undercover
If I say add some sugar to water, and bring it to a boil — Metaphysician Undercover
The value is not signified, the "procedure for determining the value" is what is signified. Do you agree? — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you even know what the use-mention distinction is?
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Of course I do. In philosophy we use a different convention. I use " " to signify a concept rather than a physical thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm trying to conform to your convention but I'm a bit sloppy and missed one. Call it a typo. — Metaphysician Undercover
do you understand the difference between a procedure (function, or operation), and an object? — Metaphysician Undercover
Have you ever seen a ledger? Every account must be stated and balanced. Call it redundancy if you want, but there must be no room for error. — Metaphysician Undercover
You just told me there is an infinite number of ways to say "2+1" — Metaphysician Undercover
Why is "3+1" not just another one of the infinite ways of saying "2+1"? — Metaphysician Undercover
you said things like "500+ 894+202" denote "a procedure for determining the value of a function applied to an argument" — Metaphysician Undercover
Your claim that "500+ 894+202" represents the value — Metaphysician Undercover
I distinctly did NOT say that. And you put that misrepresentation in quotes to fabricate something I did not say. — TonesInDeepFreeze
For a while, in order not to split hairs, I went along with your term 'process', even though you have not defined it. That was okay for a while, but I was concerned that it would cause confusion, since there are actually two different notions: (1) a function. (2) a procedure for determining the value of a function applied to an argument. (I did touch on this earlier.) — TonesInDeepFreeze
'The father of Peter Fonda' denotes the value of the function (call it 'the father of function') applied to the argument Peter Fonda. That value is Henry Fonda. — TonesInDeepFreeze
For about the seventh time now: '2+1' denotes the value of the function.. — TonesInDeepFreeze
But '2+1' is not a description of a procedure. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The terminology here is incorrect--these two signs denote the same object, even though what they signify about that object is different.Do you apprehend the flaw in your example, and the difference between what "the father of Peter Fonda" denotes, and what "Henry Fonda" denotes? — Metaphysician Undercover
Again, this confuses denotation with signification. — aletheist
In any and every proposition about "Henry Fonda," we could substitute "the father of Peter Fonda" without changing the truth value. — aletheist
Completely wrong, denotation and signification are two different aspects of a sign, corresponding respectively to its object and its interpretant. This is Semeiotic 101.Denotation is a form of signification. — Metaphysician Undercover
I offered no argument at all, I simply stated a definition--if one sign can be substituted for another in any and every proposition without changing the truth value, then both signs denote the same object. This is also Semeiotic 101.Therefore the argument that "the father of Peter Fonda" denotes the same thing as "Henry Fonda" is a fallacious argument, by means of begging the question. — Metaphysician Undercover
Completely wrong, denotation and signification are two different aspects of a sign, corresponding respectively to its object and its interpretant. This is Semeiotic 101. — aletheist
I offered no argument at all, I simply stated a definition--if one sign can be substituted for another in any and every proposition without changing the truth value, then both signs denote the same object. This is also Semeiotic 101. — aletheist
Logic generalized is semeiotic, the science of all signs--not just arguments, but also propositions and terms; and not just symbols, but also indices and icons. Subjects are the terms within propositions that denote their objects.In logic, there is no object, we have subjects. To denote is simply to be a sign of. — Metaphysician Undercover
I never claimed otherwise, I was simply correcting a misuse of the technical term "denote." Again, "Henry Fonda" and "the father of Peter Fonda" denote the same object, even though what they signify about that object is different. If we were looking at a photo of the Fonda family, and someone asked me to point to Henry and you to point to the father of Peter, then we would both correctly point to the same person.Then you're not addressing the issue we've been discussing. — Metaphysician Undercover
This reflects more terminological confusion. What a sign signifies is not its object, but its interpretant.It is claimed that if two signifiers signify things of equal value, they are exchangeable, therefore they signify the very same object. — Metaphysician Undercover
." Again, "Henry Fonda" and "the father of Peter Fonda" denote the same object, even though what they signify about that object is different. — aletheist
I agree that they signify different interpretants, but this does not preclude them from denoting the same object. It is a fact that Henry Fonda is the father of Peter Fonda, so by definition, it is also a fact that the signs "Henry Fonda" and "the father of Peter Fonda" both denote the same object. Someone who does not know the first fact would not know the second fact either, but that is irrelevant to their being facts.They clearly signify something different, and we do not have the premises required to conclude that they denote the same object. — Metaphysician Undercover
I agree that they signify different interpretants, but this does not preclude them from denoting the same object. It is a fact that Henry Fonda is the father of Peter Fonda, so by definition, it is also a fact that the signs "Henry Fonda" and "the father of Peter Fonda" both denote the same object. Someone who does not know the first fact would not know the second fact either, but that is irrelevant to their being facts. — aletheist
I agree that they signify different interpretants, but this does not preclude them from denoting the same object. — aletheist
t is a fact that Henry Fonda is the father of Peter Fonda, so by definition, it is also a fact that the signs "Henry Fonda" and "the father of Peter Fonda" both denote the same object. — aletheist
But here I find myself inclined to see his side of it. — fishfry
I might know who Henry Fonda is, but I might not know he's Peter Fonda's father. I can see Meta's point that the "father of Peter" description conveys more information than merely saying "That's Henry Fonda." — fishfry
Again, what anyone knows or does not know is beside the point. Since it is fact that Henry Fonda is the father of Peter Fonda, by definition (in semeiotic) the two signs "Henry Fonda" and "the father of Peter Fonda" denote the same object.I might know who Henry Fonda is, but I might not know he's Peter Fonda's father. — fishfry
I have never denied this, but (in semeiotic) the information conveyed by a sign corresponds to its interpretant, not its object. If we were standing in a room with Henry Fonda--preferably back when he was alive--then we could point at him and truthfully say both "that is Henry Fonda" and "that is the father of Peter Fonda." Therefore, both signs denote the same object, despite signifying different interpretants.I can see Meta's point that the "father of Peter" description conveys more information than merely saying "That's Henry Fonda." — fishfry
The only "premiss" required is the fact that Henry Fonda is the father of Peter Fonda. Someone previously unaware of this fact would learn that "Henry Fonda" and "the father of Peter Fonda" denote the same object upon being informed of it, but those two signs denoted the same object all along. Someone's ignorance does not affect the reality.As I said, they may denote the same object, but we do not have the premises required to conclude that they do. — Metaphysician Undercover
Again, in that scenario, I agree that we do not know that the two signs denote the same object; but that was never the scenario that I was discussing. I was simply pointing out that since I do know that Henry Fonda is the father of Peter Fonda, I also know that "Henry Fonda" and "the father of Peter Fonda" denote the same object. These are facts, not opinions.We have a person denoted as "the father of Peter Fonda" and we have a person denoted as "Henry Fonda". We have no other information. — Metaphysician Undercover
I never said anything about persons or equality. I merely made the point--which is utterly uncontroversial (in semeiotic)--that since Henry Fonda is the father of Peter Fonda, the two signs "Henry Fonda" and "the father of Peter Fonda" denote the same object, regardless of whether someone else knows it.To say that the person denoted as father of Peter Fonda, and the person denoted as Henry Fonda, are equal, as human beings, does not justify the claim that they are the same person. — Metaphysician Undercover
Again, I agree, the two signs signify different interpretants--i.e., convey different information--despite denoting the same object.The point is that "the father of Peter Fonda" gives different information from "Henry Fonda". — Metaphysician Undercover
Fishfry! Never in a hundred years did I think I'd see this day. Let's go, I'll buy you a beer. — Metaphysician Undercover
The point is that "the father of Peter Fonda" gives different information from "Henry Fonda". — Metaphysician Undercover
The latter gives nothing, just the name of a person. The first expression also denotes a person, as well as the second expression denotes a person. But the information required to conclude that they are one and the same person is not provided. Even if we add the further premise, "Henry has a son Peter", the condition of reversibility, equality, is fulfilled, but we still cannot conclude that they denote the same person. There might be more than one Henry Fonda with a son Peter. Therefore there is still a possibility of error, which demonstrates why such conclusions are unsound. — Metaphysician Undercover
Again, what anyone knows or does not know is beside the point. Since it is fact that Henry Fonda is the father of Peter Fonda, by definition (in semeiotic) the two signs "Henry Fonda" and "the father of Peter Fonda" denote the same object. — aletheist
I have never denied this, but (in semeiotic) the information conveyed by a sign corresponds to its interpretant, not its object. If we were standing in a room with Henry Fonda--preferably back when he was alive--then we could point at him and truthfully say both "that is Henry Fonda" and "that is the father of Peter Fonda." Therefore, both signs denote the same object, despite signifying different interpretants. — aletheist
The point is that "the father of Peter Fonda" gives different information from "Henry Fonda".
— Metaphysician Undercover
Again, I agree, the two signs signify different interpretants--i.e., convey different information--despite denoting the same object. — aletheist
Again, what anyone knows or does not know is beside the point. Since it is fact that Henry Fonda is the father of Peter Fonda, by definition (in semeiotic) the two signs "Henry Fonda" and "the father of Peter Fonda" denote the same object. — aletheist
I never said anything about persons or equality. I merely made the point--which is utterly uncontroversial (in semeiotic)--that since Henry Fonda is the father of Peter Fonda, the two signs "Henry Fonda" and "the father of Peter Fonda" denote the same object, regardless of whether someone else knows it. — aletheist
That latter is a bit disingenuous. If I say Socrates is a Greek philosopher, someone might object because they think I might have meant Socrates the cat philosopher. That's not really a good objection, if you fully qualified everything there would be no end to it. — fishfry
Henry Fonda IS the father of Peter and that's that. — fishfry
Good grief, I never said that they necessarily denote the same object, I only said that they actually denote the same object. That is why I kept calling this a fact. If Henry Fonda were not the father of Peter Fonda, then obviously the signs "Henry Fonda" and "the father of Peter Fonda" would not denote the same object. What I mainly wanted to do was simply point out the difference between what a sign denotes (its object) and what a sign signifies (its interpretant).So, to make the example relevant, we must start with the two expressions, "father of Peter Fonda", and "Henry Fonda", and you need to demonstrate how they necessarily refer to the same object, without begging the question. — Metaphysician Undercover
I have quite deliberately said nothing directly about that issue until now, because I was mainly interested in commenting on the other example that came up. Its relevance has to with the question whether "2+1" and "3" are likewise different signs that denote the same object despite signifying different interpretants. The problem, of course, is that we cannot even in principle point at something and say both "that is 2+1" and "that is 3." However, we can point at a collection of three apples and say both "that is 2+1 apples" and "that is 3 apples." Moreover, we can substitute "2+1" for "3" in any proposition without changing its truth value or in any equation without changing its result. What should we conclude from this?Then the example is irrelevant to the issue we are discussing, that "2+1" denotes the same object as "3". — Metaphysician Undercover
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