Heat doesn't radiate. Heat is the transfer of thermal energy between two bodies.
There are three modes of heat transfer, conduction, convection and radiation. — RussellA
If heat is the transfer of thermal energy, and we're using the term "heat" consistently, then in each and every instance where we use "heat", we ought be able to substitute that term with "the transfer of thermal energy", and retain all sensibility. — creativesoul
"Heat" is really meaningless then, because if it referred to the activity of heating or cooling, it would necessarily be in the body, in order that the body could heat up or cool down. Or is "heat" just metaphor to you? — Metaphysician Undercover
Don't you think it's the word "heat" which is the most metaphorical here...Yet it maintains descriptive power by way of metaphor, so it is still used. — Metaphysician Undercover
The word "transfer" is being used as a metaphor — RussellA
The heat moves from one body to the other, in a process that can be described with mathematical predictability. — Banno
That made me laugh.Using mathematics to make a prediction does not imply that the process has been described. — Metaphysician Undercover
You've a very odd view on things, Meta. A mathematical model that makes accurate predictions is not for you a description. — Banno
Simply put, to count something is not to describe it. — Metaphysician Undercover
Sure, counting can be describing, and mathematics can be used to describe things. But counting, and mathematical predictions are not necessarily descriptions. That's where the problem lies, and why I said "using mathematics to make a prediction does not imply that the process has been described". — Metaphysician Undercover
One of the main planks of Kripke's justification is that “Heat is the motion of molecules will be necessary, not contingent, and one only has the illusion of contingency" — RussellA
Similarly for many other such identifications, say, that lightning is electricity. Flashes of lightning are flashes of electricity. Lightning is an electrical discharge. We can imagine, of course, I suppose, other ways in which the sky might be illuminated at night with the same sort of flash without any electrical discharge being present. Here too, I am inclined to say, when we imagine this, we imagine something with all the visual appearances of lightning but which is not, in fact, lightning. One could be told: this appeared to be lightning but it was not. I suppose this might even happen now. Someone might, by a clever sort of apparatus, produce some phenomenon in the sky which would fool people into thinking that there was lightning even though in fact no lightning was present. And you wouldn't say that that phenomenon, because it looks like lightning, was in fact lightning. It was a different phenomenon from lightning, which is the phenomenon of an electrical discharge; and this is not lightning but just some thing that deceives us into thinking that there is lightning. — Naming and Necessity
Just this first paragraph is hopelessly confused. It seems to say that describing things is not to describe them... — Banno
I wouldn't read it that way. Rather, Kripke has already made his case and is applying his account to heat. I think we can drop the heat argument without much impact on Kripke's approach to modality. He is not trying to justify his account of possible world semantics by appeal to heat. — Banno
No it isn't. The heat moves from one body to the other, in a process that can be described with mathematical predictability. Nothing metaphorical about it. — Banno
One cannot use mathematics without using it descriptively. — Metaphysician Undercover
But isn't his argument circular, in that if the identity statement "the Moon is made of blue cheese " is true, then he is arguing that the moon is necessarily made of blue cheese. Similarly, if the identity statement "the Moon is not made of blue cheese" is true, then the Moon is necessarily not made of blue cheese. — RussellA
How do we determine that two rigid designators refer to the same thing. — RussellA
Kripke said “Heat is the motion of molecules”, which is incorrect. — RussellA
If object A travelling at 5m/s hits a stationary object B, the speed of object A reduces to zero, and the speed of B increases to 5m/s. Something called "speed" has not literally moved from A to B. Speed is a measurement, not something that has an independent existence — RussellA
Sure. But not sure what your point is here. I don't see how this is a problem specific to Kripke's account, if that is what you are thinking. — Banno
Kripke wrote: "To state the view succinctly: we use both the terms ‘heat’ and ‘the motion of molecules’ as rigid designators for a certain external phenomenon. Since heat is in fact the motion of molecules, and the designators are rigid, by the argument I have given here, it is going to be necessary that heat is the motion of molecules." — RussellA
whether or not the table is made of ice is always a human judgement. — Metaphysician Undercover
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