I don't it's a case of ambiguity. You just don't have enough information to know what's being asked. You'd have to go back and get the request clarified, right? — frank
I thought of this because if instead you were told to sort the marbles by color, there's no ambiguity -- well, not this particular ambiguity. Someone might distinguish the reds and blues more finely, but then we'd be back at the first ambiguity, which is really along a different axis, right?
I wouldn't even throw this little puzzle out there if it weren't for what Kimhi says about propositions versus actual occurrences. The options you get dealing with marbles are different from the options you get dealing with the colors of marbles. — Srap Tasmaner
the full context principle assigns meanings (Fregean senses) to subsentential expressions (e.g. names predicates and logical connectives) not only in the context of whole sentences but also in the context the other sentences a sentence relates to in a language game — Pierre-Normand
how contents are differently understood or differently individuated within different language games that warrant different ways to mark the content/force distinction — Pierre-Normand
---- I'll try to catch up so we're not having two conversations, but I'm going to hold off on your post just after this one for a bit. — Srap Tasmaner
Why not say that there is a common purported content (how things are, state of affairs) that is here denied and there asserted? Consider the content of the assertion "this apple is red" or "p". When one asserts that, what one thinks is that the apple is red. When you use the same linguistic form to deny that the apple is red, one says "it is not the case that this apple is red" or "not p", this can not be construed as you standing in the different relations (with the "force" of negation, say) to the same state of affairs consisting in the apple being red since, from your point of view, there is no such state of affairs in the world. — Pierre-Normand
It's the alternating monologues model of conversation, where the speaker simply expresses their thought out loud within earshot of an audience; language exists to mediate the connection of my mind to the world, and my audience more or less eavesdrops on my review of that relation. — Srap Tasmaner
I wonder if the impetus for separating content from assertoric force is related to the 'view from nowhere.'
It's language that's detached from any particular human. It's like the narrator of the novel we inhabit. — frank
I was rather arguing for something that is very much the polar opposite of that view. — Pierre-Normand
What still remains an open question to me (even though I lean towards the Wittgensteinian quietism of McDowell) is whether their accounts of this self-conscious propositional unity constitutes an improvement over the charitable accounts, put forth by Evans and McDowell, of what Frege was trying to accomplish when he sought to individuate thought/proposition at the level of sense (Sinn) rather than at the level of extensional reference (Bedeutung) in order to account both for the rationality of the thinking subject and for the objective purport of their thoughts. — Pierre-Normand
The full context principle assigns meanings (Fregean senses) to subsentential expressions (e.g. names, predicates and logical connectives) not only in the context of whole sentences but also in the context of the other sentences a sentence relates to in a language game. (And this is not exhausted merely by inferential relations). This is the point about actual occurrences of propositions — Pierre-Normand
one way of buttressing the idea that propositions have independent existence is to align them with the mental, rather than the physical. — Srap Tasmaner
the question is in what sense "what he said" is a thought, while the actual words spoken were merely a physical "expression" or even representation of that thought. — Srap Tasmaner
There is a point you can make about content, the proposition, and a different point you can make about actual occurrences, in which that content features, but Frege, I think it is claimed, forgets what he's about and tries to make a single point about both, or tries to make a point about one that can only be made about the other, and somehow tricks himself into thinking he has not mixed up the two. — Srap Tasmaner
Fair enough. I misspoke, since what I have at hand is not Kimhi's book but the reports of his book found hereabouts. The ambiguity may not be his. Similarly it's the discussion of PM on this thread that I found problematic, not the account given by Kimhi. I'm not sure what to make of the paragraph you quote, in particular the conclusion: " Therefore, Geach's understanding of Frege's observation conflates the two senses of propositional occurrence: symbolic and actual." Not at all sure what "symbolic and actual" is doing here.I wouldn't sell him short. — J
or the subsequent Deduction Theorem: Γ ∪{φ}⊢ψ if and only if Γ ⊢φ →ψ. The first of these is about what can be written in Γ, the second about what happens when Γ is extended. In the sequent calculus, Modus Ponens is derived. Cut provides a generalisation of Modus Ponens, but the cut elimination theorem displaces it from any centrality. Modus Ponens is not any one expression, and is not always fundamental.Proposition 12.19. If Γ ⊢φ and Γ ⊢φ →ψ, then Γ ⊢ψ. — Open Logic, p.180
We must give up the idea of a clearly defined shared structure which
language-users acquire and then apply to cases. And we should try again to say how convention in any important sense is involved in language; or, as I think, we should give up the attempt to illuminate how we communicate by appeal to conventions. — Davidson, A Nice Derangement of Epitaphs
Who was it said " "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it"? — Banno
Should we picture the meaning of a sentence as something we approach only asymptotically, as our comprehension of the context improves?the full context principle assigns meanings (Fregean senses) to subsentential expressions (e.g. names predicates and logical connectives) not only in the context of whole sentences but also in the context the other sentences a sentence relates to in a language game — Pierre-Normand
If I judge P true, and so do you, aren't we making something we'd want to call "the same judgment"? — Srap Tasmaner
The truth cannot be told in such a way as to be understood and not be believed. — Blake, not Frege or Kimhi
Should we picture the meaning of a sentence as something we approach only asymptotically, as our comprehension of the context improves? — Banno
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