(quote from Kimhi)since Pa does not display an assertion, — Pierre-Normand
That's what a proposition is supposed to be: that thing we can agree or disagree on. — frank
This intended reading, I think, preserves the philosophical distinction Frege is drawing in this passage between the mental act of thinking (grasping the thought) and the truth of the thought itself. — Pierre-Normand
He's reliant on ambiguity. But further, he seems not to consider the developments of logic and metalogic since Frege - and they are profound. — Banno
I like the clarity of this, but doesn't it beg the question? The "other side," so to speak, would say, "A proposition is supposed to be a thing with a truth-value, something we don't merely agree or disagree on, but claim objective reasons for doing so." — J
And the discussion in this thread of modus ponens was just plain muddled. — Banno
Geach agrees with Frege that we identify an argument as valid by recognizing it to be in accord with a principle of inference which is a norm that pertains to acts. Thus, on Geach's reading, Frege's observation [that p may occur in discourse as asserted or unasserted while still being recognized as the same p] applies both to an actual argument of the form modus ponens and to modus ponens as a principle of inference. Therefore, Geach's understanding of Frege's observation conflates the two senses of propositional occurrence: symbolic and actual. — p. 38
It's hard to be sure, but there seems to be a profound misapprehension concerning what logic is, underpinning the Kimhi's work and much of the writing on this thread. I'm not inspired to go down that path. — Banno
we can't use utterances or sentences as the basis of agreement. It has to be propositions, or the content of an uttered sentence. With regard to whether there's life on other planets, notice how we "smuggle in" an assertion as Kimhe puts it. — frank
as long as you're not saying that agreement is only consensual, then we're on the same page. — J
…there seems to be a profound misapprehension concerning what logic is, underpinning the Kimhi's work and much of the writing on this thread. — Banno
I've no high aptitude for logic. Just a rough comprehension of the basics — Banno
The subject (or argument, in Frege’s terminology) is what Julian Roberts in The Logic of Reflection calls “an empty center.” Roberts goes on, “And the ‛object’ which fills that [empty] subject position, accordingly, is not a collection of attributes (featureless). It is a ‛thing’ only to the extent that the function makes it into one.” — J
“There is, ultimately, something rather raffish about a function (predicate); it wanders the world, hoping to connect, but may well never succeed. There is nothing in the function that establishes it as a part of reality (unreal).” — Roberts
If the subject is empty, the object is featureless, and the predicate is unreal, then that’s a triad of zeroes, and I don’t see how a function linking three zeroes can produce a non-zero product. — ucarr
Language is here in a predicament that justifies the departure from what we normally say. — Frege, On Concept and Object – Posthumous Writings, 97 – footnotes omitted
True, we cannot fail to recognize that we are here confronted by an awkwardness of language, which I admit is unavoidable — Frege, On Concept and Object – Posthumous Writings, 97 – footnotes omitted
But nobody can require that my stipulations shall be in accord with Kerry’s mode of expression, but only that they be consistent in themselves. — Frege, On Concept and Object – Posthumous Writings, 97 – footnotes omitted
I take this passage to be central to what Kimhi wants to say — J
The mass of an object, for instance, can be treated as an abstract object, — Srap Tasmaner
Abstract objects are things like numbers, sets, and propositions. — frank
Both IEP and Roberts refer to this Gedanke sense, but neither give a specific reference in Frege. From the context, I'm guessing it's to be found in On Sense and Reference. I don't have time today to hunt it down but maybe someone else can. — J
That's what a proposition is supposed to be: that thing we can agree or disagree on.
If you start with a strongly materialistic bias, you're likely to lean toward behaviorism, which says that we never really agree on anything. — frank
Abstract objects are things like numbers, sets, and propositions. Mass is a physical property. — frank
I'd have to go with Schopenhauer and say that subject and object are two sides of the same coin. — frank
These two objects have the same mass.
These two cartons have the same number of eggs.
These two sentences mean the same thing. — Srap Tasmaner
I can say we agree, and I can say what we agree on, without attributing to "what we agree on" independent existence, but instead treating it hylomorphically as an abstract object that is immanent within our agreement. "Our agreement" is another such abstraction. Does it exist independently of our agreeing? — Srap Tasmaner
I think abstract objects are products of analysis. — frank
It might be closer to the argument given to say that Frege, in particular, does not set aside force (even if other and later logicians do) but that he brings it in in a way that is somehow at odds with the unity of force and content in our utterances. That might be a claim that it is a fool's errand to distinguish force and content (somewhat as Quine argued the impossibility of separating the analytic and synthetic 'components' of a sentence), or it might be a claim that Frege has distinguished them incorrectly, or something else, I don't know. — Srap Tasmaner
What is wanted? — Srap Tasmaner
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