why is this such a prominent feature of language to posit an ontology for Pegasus or Santa Claus? — Shawn
Yet, even if Pegasus and Santa Claus don't exist ontologically, we can go to a shopping mall during Christmas and say "that person" is Santa Claus. Well, not exactly. Likewise, we can point to a statue of Pegasus and say "that is Pegasus", but again, not really. These are representations, in the everyday use of the word, of our fictitious ideas.
It is a complicated topic. — Manuel
Perhaps this is what Wittgenstein was talking about in para 58 of Philosophical Investigations, where I think he is saying that a name such as "Santa Claus" is part of the language game, not an ontological part of the world. — RussellA
It's a wise parent who knows just how to answer children depending upon the age and sophistication of the child.
Some answers are, in themselves, things of beauty. A friend of mine from years past was asked by his young son, "Daddy, how high is the sky?" His answer; "Exactly 50 feet higher than the top of the rainbow." — Torus34
Does this not necessitate the use of language towards the descriptions of these fictions or literary figures in apparent reality?
Of course... — Shawn
Where is Santa Claus?'
'At the North Pole, of course, my child!'
, then, nothing further can be said, than what was told was a lie. So, there's an ontological commitment once treated as a statement or proposition, that can be elucidated when treating these fictitious entities as non-existent or truth apt. — Shawn
If we really want to take this seriously, then we simply state the ontological "area"/"region"/"place" where they exist as fictitious entities or literary figures, no? I see this as a necessary condition when talking about things such as Pegasus or Santa Claus, no? — Shawn
The process of determining their commitment as ontological entities seems important to say as clear as possible, that they are a fiction. — Shawn
IE, if relations don't have an ontological existence in the world, Santa Claus only exists in the mind. But if relations do have an ontological existence in the world, then Santa Claus exists in the world. — RussellA
Frege.......Santa Claus and psychologism, — Shawn
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