the term "the President" refers to Joe Biden. — Michael
Yes, this is why I disagree with Putnam. Putnam believes that differences in the thing in itself, differences which we have no access to, can impose change on our meaning. These differences can only impose changes in the absolute facticity of our claims.Arent we condemned to a world of ideas? — Joshs
See the SEP article on names — Michael
Let A and B be any two terms which differ in extension. By assumption (II) they must differ in meaning (in the sense of "intension").
Yes, this is why I disagree with Putnam. Putnam believes that differences in the thing in itself, differences which we have no access to, can impose change on our meaning. These differences can only impose changes in the absolute facticity of our claims — hypericin
Would we all be wrong who say "Joe Biden is president?" — hypericin
cheerleading different linguistic conventions that emphasize different semantics for different purposes. — sime
To think otherwise is to grant linguists powers of omniscient authority. — sime
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