So maybe Kant’s term isn’t a mere idiom after all. Which is neither here nor there with respect to the thread. — Mww
Kantian transcendental idealism, not needing any inverted commas — Mww
Kripke wants to unite the contingent with identity, which Kant deemed, if not impossible, then at least logically insufficient in regard to a brand new philosophy. — Mww
Kripke didn't want to unite contingent with identity, he wanted to unite necessity with identity. — RussellA
Sorry, but if you read the paper, Kripke posits the logicality on the empirical finding that Hesperus is Phosphorus. — Shawn
identity is within the thing itself, while logical necessity is within the human mind. Therefore identity will always present itself as infinite possibility — Metaphysician Undercover
But surely it may have turned out that Superman had taken on a different secret identity? — Banno
the meaning of "synthetic a priori judgements" cannot be irrelevant to the thread, otherwise, why mention it in the first place. — RussellA
In the B edition, Kant inserted a refutation of idealism. — RussellA
Kant was an empirical realist. — RussellA
Kripke didn't want to unite contingent with identity, he wanted to unite necessity with identity. — RussellA
De re and de dicto are about how one interprets an ambiguous statement. How does that tell us something about how some guy in an alternate universe is Superman? — frank
Imagine Lois travels to an alternate universe where Superman landed in Mexico instead of Iowa. He was raised by the Cortez family and they named him Julio.
So what makes this guy Superman? — frank
This seems the answer implicit in the phrase "identity and necessity." That which we identify and define as a specific entity, by necessity is that specific thing, existing in but one world. To allow it in other worlds, eliminates its identity — Hanover
For the most part, we do have some essential properties in mind when we talk about hypotheticals. — frank
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