the activities of specifying the meaning of a word and of stating what an object is are essentially the same; and hence each of them has an equal right to be regarded as a form of definition*
If I am right, there is more to the idea of real definition than is commonly conceded. For the activities of specifying the meaning of a word and of stating what an object is are essentially the same; and hence each of them has an equal right to be regarded as a form of definition*
:smile:Singleton Socrates — Wayfarer
No. This is only half correct. The quote reads:Doesn't this just say that definitions are meaningful because they state what the object in question is? And that knowing what things are is the basis for creating definitions? — Wayfarer
The point is, he is arguing against the strict analycity of meaning. He rejects that the derivation of truth in logical statement gives a meaningful definition. Just define what an object is directly. That's meaningful.My response is: so what? What is the point? — Wayfarer
For me, what is salient here is the failure of the modal account of essence. — Banno
A property is something which does not indicate the essence of a thing, but yet belongs to that thing alone, and is predicated convertibly of it. Thus it is a property of man to be capable of learning grammar; for if he is a man, then he is capable of learning grammar, and if he is capable of learning grammar, he is a man. — Aristotle, Topics I.v (102a17), Tr. W. A. Pickard-Cambridge
But the converse of this last statement does not hold; for to show that [two things] are the same is not enough to establish a definition. — Aristotle, Topics I.v (102a14), Tr. W. A. Pickard-Cambridge
Because in every thing, that which pertains to its essence is distinct from its proper accident: thus in man it is one thing that he is a mortal rational animal, and another that he is a risible animal. We must therefore consider that every delight is a proper accident resulting from happiness, or from some part of happiness; since the reason that a man is delighted is that he has some fitting good, either in reality, or in hope, or at least in memory. — Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologiae, I.II.Q2.A6
You must be familiar with Kripke's point, that we do not need to know the essence of some individual in order to refer to that individual? — Banno
I'm not sure what it would mean to know something without knowing the essence, and I am not sure what people have in mind when they talk about knowing something without an essence. — Leontiskos
So what is an appropriate specification of the meaning? The only satisfactory answer
appears to be that the specification should make clear what the meaning (essentially) is; it should
provide us, that is to say, with some account of the meaning's essence.
My understanding of Aristotle's notion of essence is that it is a given something's definition. — Moliere
The first thing that comes to mind is know-how. I know-how to hammer, regardless of what the hammer is pointed at (or even what the hammer is -- animal, vegetable, mineral, or familiar tool). I don't need to know the essence of a thing in order to manipulate it. And a lot of knowledge is at this level of manipulation rather than at a definitional level. The definitions come later when you're trying to put knowledge into some sort of form which can be shared to assist in spreading the knowledge. — Moliere
Hmm. Not sure how this is going to work. — Banno
The article goes on to proffer a view of essence based on definitions. I gather you think this a better approach, whereas I remain unconvinced. — Banno
It seems to me that we do not need definitions in order to "pick out" individuals - the classic case here being Donnellan's Thales. — Banno
So taking a bit more care, I am going to say that I do not know of a way of talking about essences that is of much use, and that I am quite confident that we do not need to be able to provide an account of a things essence in order to talk about that thing. — Banno
Not beyond a slight historical curiosity, no. As discussed, I think more recent approaches more... interesting....you aren't interested in Aristotelianism... — Leontiskos
Well, no. I don't see what it does. Why do we need it, if at all?Are you committed to the modal view that Fine is addressing? — Leontiskos
Well, I take them as a good place to begin. And so far we don't seem to have a common ground, a stoa in which we might have a decent chat. The logic of individuals informs the logic of predicates, so proper names are at least not irrelevant.I'm not sure what proper names would have to do with definitions. — Leontiskos
Sounds like descriptivism to my ear. Surely not? Hence my reference to Thales, a simple case I think pretty convincing. Names do not refer in virtue of some description.In that case I think the description will be implicit in the name relation. — Leontiskos
Well, no. I don't see what it does. Why do we need it, if at all? — Banno
Sounds like descriptivism to my ear. Surely not? Hence my reference to Thales, a simple case I think pretty convincing. Names do not refer in virtue of some description.
So perhaps you might share what "description will be implicit in the name relation" when we talk of Thales? IS that a way to proceed? — Banno
If names do not require descriptions, then why are descriptions needed to communicate names? — Leontiskos
A novice who asks "Who is Thales?" does not have at hand a description of Thales, and yet they are asking about Thales. — Banno
[When we learn,] There are two ways in which we must already have knowledge: of some things we must already believe that they are, of others we must grasp what the items spoken about are (and of some things both). — Aristotle, Posterior Analytics, I.i, tr. Barnes
But the one who inquires about Thales already has some notion of Thales, and this should count as a description. — Leontiskos
Not sure how that would help. — Banno
Again, it is not apparent to me that we need any sort of description to be attached to a name in order for it to function. — Banno
Supose the student thought Thales was a Spanish fisherwoman. — Banno
This...?it turned out that your example failed... — Leontiskos
Sure, he has a description. That description fails to pick Thales from all the other men who lived a long time ago. So I don't see how it helps choose between them, in such a way that the student is talking about Thales... which I had taken to be the point of having a description handy.Contrary to your claim, the novice already has a description of Thales and he wishes it to be filled out. His description involves things like, 'Thales was a man', 'Thales lived a long time ago', etc. — Leontiskos
I think I've shown that this is not the case. Further, you seem now to be saying that we can know which object is being identified from any description, and not just a definite description, which I find quite enigmatic. As if "The fish nearest to Corinth" were adequate to give the essence of Thales.But in order to know which object is being identified, we must have a description of the object. — Leontiskos
Names can just refer, sans description. — Banno
One view is that a definite description sets out the essence of the individual involved. The individual just is that which satisfies the definite description. But if we do not need definite descriptions in order for proper names to work, then we do not need such essences, either. — Banno
I decided to go back to Donnellan because it seemed to me that his, earlier, approach might cover both modal cases and Fine's use of definitions. — Banno
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