Trouble is, we talked of heat well before we described it as the motion of molecules. And not just the sensation, but what was needed to kindle a fire and boil the kettle and make winter bearable. Not just the sensation.i) heat is no more than the motion of molecules, heat is a synonym for the motion of molecules, and therefore "heat is the motion of molecules" is an analytic statement and known a priori, — RussellA
But keeping with Kripke's judgement that being made of wood might be essential property of this lectern.. — RussellA
Someone could say that there is a possible world where this lectern could have been made of plastic, which is highly likely. However, there can be many definitions of "possible worlds", but this is not what Kripke's means by "possible world". For Kripke, a "possible world" is a world in which this lectern keeps its essential properties. — RussellA
Therefore, this lectern, which is made of wood, has the essential property of being made of wood, meaning that in all possible worlds it is still made of wood. This lectern is necessarily made of wood in all possible worlds, because by definition, if this lectern is made of wood in the actual world it must also be made of wood in all possible worlds. — RussellA
Again, this odd interpretation has the result that when one says the lectern might have been in the other room, one is talking about a different lectern.However, if we are talking about a particular thing, that lectern in particular, then every property is essential to it being the very thing which it is. That is the law of identity. — Metaphysician Undercover
this is were Meta goes amiss.By the law of identity all properties of a particular individual are essential properties. — Metaphysician Undercover
Again, this odd interpretation has the result that when one says the lectern might have been in the other room, one is talking about a different lectern. — Banno
Trouble is, we talked of heat well before we described it as the motion of molecules — Banno
Again, this odd interpretation has the result that when one says the lectern might have been in the other room, one is talking about a different lectern. — Banno
As if "The lectern might have been in the other room" were false. — Banno
Again, this odd interpretation has the result that when one says the lectern might have been in the other room, one is talking about a different lectern. — Banno
If the lectern before us were made of plastic instead of wood, it would be a different lectern to the wooden one that is actually before us. — Banno
Being made of wood is not essential of being a lectern.............By the law of identity all properties of a particular individual are essential properties.......... So we cannot say that it is necessarily made of wood, that might be a mistaken judgement. — Metaphysician Undercover
However, this would be inconvenient for humans in navigating their world if everything they saw in the world was continually changing. — RussellA
That's because if the lectern we are talking about is in the other room, it is a different lectern from the one we know to be in this room, necessarily. — Metaphysician Undercover
It must be true as Metaphysician says: "By the law of identity all properties of a particular individual are essential properties". — RussellA
Here he’s saying this lectern cannot have any material property other than the essential one it does — Mww
It is false; it is a mere logical possibility, nothing more than a matter of mere words. — Janus
It is logically possible but not actually possible. — Janus
The lectern is in this room and the lectern might have been in the other room.
Logically the lectern could have been in a different room, but for all we know actually it could not have been — Janus
The lectern is in this room and the lectern might have been in the other room.
Here he’s saying this lectern cannot have any material property other than the essential one it does
— Mww
I don't agree. (…) he might equally have used a material example such as that the lectern might have been painted pink or had his name engraved on it. — Banno
These are ways in which the properties of that very lectern may have been otherwise. — Banno
THIS lectern cannot be in THAT room, for then it would be in two spaces simultaneously. — Mww
Add all the properties you like, but it’s still going to be made of wood, it’s still going to be in this room. — Mww
And you continue to mix the law of identity with the identity of Indiscernibles. — Banno
I'll maintain that Metaphysician Undercover is mistaken and that an object's properties may be subject to change and that it makes sense to talk of essential an non-essential attributes. — Banno
The law of identity allows that a thing could continue to be the same thing, despite undergoing change. That is the temporal extension of a thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'll maintain that Metaphysician Undercover is mistaken and that an object's properties may be subject to change and that it makes sense to talk of essential an non-essential attributes. — Banno
but I see nothing in possible world semantics that is anything more than determining what can obviously be imagined without logical contradiction. — Janus
Just so, as here....until it becomes murky... — Janus
Hardly. There are issues here, but if we cannot agree on the framework within which they are to be discussed, the topic cannot progress....essentialism — Janus
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