tI's putting knowledge of elemental constituents to good use.
— creativesoul
What are elemental constituents? — Wallows
Parts that a thing is made of, all of which are necessary for that thing to exist, and none of which are existentially dependent upon being a part of that thing. — creativesoul
The tool is to look at a sentence that presents an erroneous description, and notice that nevertheless, it is about the thing misdescribed. — Banno
When is a theory undone.
At what point is it unreasonable to keep believing in a theory.
It's commonly understood that any theory can be kept from rejection by the addition of suitable hypotheses, ad hoc. And that at some point one ought just drop this process and say "yeah, that theory is buggered".
The theory at hand is that for any given proper name there is always some definite description that picks out one individual, that individual being the referent of the proper name.
Look at the question "Who is Hitler?". Ask yourself "who is this question about?" Isn't there something quite infelicitous about claiming it is about anything other than Hitler? — Banno
Now if you don't see that, so be it. You can add whatever auxiliary hypotheses you wish in order to save your theory. Go ahead and make the question reliant on the other's knowledge of Hitler, but all you are saying is that language occurs in a community.
Parts that a thing is made of, all of which are necessary for that thing to exist, and none of which are existentially dependent upon being a part of that thing.
— creativesoul
I see. So, the simplest atomic constituent is self-evident? Isn't this logical atomism or Leibnizian monadology rehashed? — Wallows
I do not call them "atomic constituents", and no, they are not self-evident. — creativesoul
If they were, there would be no need for first focusing upon the composite in order to acquire knowledge that they are - in fact - a composite. — creativesoul
All this is not theory but phenomenological description of how we know, and come to know things about people and events; if you can't provide any alternative account, why should I take you seriously? — Janus
How is the fact that an erroneous description is about the thing described determined? Can you explain that? — Janus
Prior to acquiring knowledge that water consists of hydrogen and oxygen, we first focus upon the thing we're calling water. — creativesoul
Prior to acquiring knowledge that water consists of hydrogen and oxygen, we first focus upon the thing we're calling water.
— creativesoul
I don't understand. What's the point being made about this? — Wallows
What if I can't. Does that make the question "Who is Hitler?" not about Hitler? I say no. — Banno
And of course you are presenting a theory.
Kripke shows that the theory is wrong. It does no good to reply "well, show me a theory that is right"; the absence of an alternative does not show that your theory must be correct. — Banno
Kripke shows that the theory is wrong. It does no good to reply "well, show me a theory that is right"; the absence of an alternative does not show that your theory must be correct.
If you were reading the book with care, you would have seen how Kripke argued against your suggestion of a web of descriptions. In the end, your proposal becomes much the same as Kripke's causal chain. — Banno
I'm just trying to answer your questions, which seem irrelevant by my lights. — creativesoul
How is the fact that an erroneous description is about the thing described determined? Can you explain that? — Janus
When we refer to historical figures we don't do so in a vacuum do we? — Janus
Sure we can just talk about the person 'What if Joan (of Arc) had not been burned alive'? How do know i am referring to Joan of Arc, if I don't say the 'of Arc'? The 'of Arc' is a definite description. You might guess without the 'of Arc', because of the question about not being burned alive; but the implication is that she was burend alive. Now this may not be a strictly definite description (other Joans may have been burned alive) but it is certainly a definite description if you add the date 14th May 1431 (since that is the 'official' date even if that date is not correct).
Kripke doesn't discount the function of definite descriptions for fixing the reference of a proper name, either initially while initiating the naming practice, or subsequently for the purpose of initiating new member into the naming practice. He insists on distinguishing reference fixing from reference determination. The latter is that in virtue of which the proper name has (or comes to acquire) its actual referent, while the former only is a means by which participants are enabled to hook up into the practice. — Pierre-Normand
Actually I would kind of agree with this. Say there have been causal chains of events that have determined reference in relation to historical figures; the question then would seem to be as to what those causal chains of events have consisted in. I would say they would have consisted in people telling stories to others about those historical figures (oral and written histories). But what are stories if they are not descriptions, both definite and otherwise? — Janus
My question was in regards to counterfactuals and their existential dependency, as you call it. Is it not important that the world we can stipulate is existentially dependent on the one from where the stipulation originates from? Therefore, I am confused about how can anything be called necessary in another possible world if they are contingent on our own.
I think I can't express this any more clearly than the above. — Wallows
Yes, they are. But even in the case where an individual who gets initiated in the practice of naming a historical figure NN, only is being told false stories about NN, she can still successfully refer to NN and have entirely false beliefs about NN when she thinks about her as NN. — Pierre-Normand
The tool is to look at a sentence that presents an erroneous description, and notice that nevertheless, it is about the thing misdescribed.
— Banno
How is the fact that an erroneous description is about the thing described determined? Can you explain that? — Janus
A description is determined to be about the thing because it is something said about the thing.... — creativesoul
Great! But you haven't answered the question. Take another look. — Janus
My two cents' worth:how can we assert something as necessarily true in all possible worlds? — Wallows
Cause we say so... how else? — creativesoul
What I was asking for is an explanation of how we are able to (without being nonsensically arbitrary) "say so". I say it is on account of our socially shared and more or less entrenched stories (histories) which consist in descriptions. — Janus
Yes, I would agree that that is certainly possible, and again, in this discussion I have allowed that definite descriptions may not be accurate. I have only been arguing that it is on account of them that we have any idea about who we are referring to (unless we have met the person, of course). — Janus
It depends on how we constrain the set of possible worlds. — andrewk
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.