The fact remains that referencing is something distinct from naming, describing, or a combination of these. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you agree? — creativesoul
You don't seem to have ever actually defined "successful reference", but I see no reason to conclude that this can only be done through common language. — Metaphysician Undercover
The op directs my attention toward naming and describing, neither of which is essential to reference. So I'd say that the op is a failed attempt at directing my attention toward the concept of "reference". — Metaphysician Undercover
There is more than one conception of reference. Your disagreement does not render the conception in the OP mistaken. The fact that you work from a different notion than I has no bearing upon the explanatory power and/or verifiability/falsifiability of the one I'm presenting in the OP. — creativesoul
Your OP conflates with ambiguity, two distinct types of referring, referring to a subject and referring to an object. — Metaphysician Undercover
First, 1) is impossible, because I cannot direct your attention to something simply by naming it. This would require that you already know the name of it. — Metaphysician Undercover
Next, 2) is highly unlikely, as you say. So we get to the others, 3-6 which are various combinations of naming and describing, and this is what language use generally is, acts which combine naming and describing. — Metaphysician Undercover
Talking about something does not qualify as successful reference. — Metaphysician Undercover
There has been much said about successful reference. As I understand it, many a philosophical position diverge at this point. There is a fork in the road. The scope of consequences stemming from one path or another cannot be overstated nor can the knowledge of them be overvalued. I am of the very strong opinion that all actual cases of successful reference share the same core set of common denominators. That core, however, is unobservable. Rather, it can only be arrived at by virtue of careful strong groundwork and subsequent consideration. So... — creativesoul
Referring is referring. A subject is not an object. Subjects and objects are referred to in the manner laid out in the OP. That is two distinct names for different 'kinds' of referent, not different kinds of referring. A referent is what is picked out of this world by the designator/sign/symbol. Names and descriptions are designators. — creativesoul
If I use the same term in two different senses in the same argument, then we''ll address it accordingly. — creativesoul
The problem I explained to you, is that the same name refers to two kinds of referent. — Metaphysician Undercover
So tell me, how were you using "Cookie"? — Metaphysician Undercover
You have not used "Cookie" to refer to an object, because you have not shown me that a creature who bears that name even exists, so it is impossible that you have successfully referenced an object named "Cookie". — Metaphysician Undercover
This mistakenly presupposes that you must see Cookie in order to focus your attention on her. You haven't and yet you have. — creativesoul
Now you're getting to the point. I have not focused my attention on any physical creature named "Cookie". You don't seem to be getting that. — Metaphysician Undercover
I actually don't even believe that you have a cat named "Cookie". — Metaphysician Undercover
I think you've just brought this idea up, "my cat named Cookie", as a subject for discussion. — Metaphysician Undercover
And yet you speak of her! — creativesoul
And yet you speak of her!
— creativesoul
If that's what you call "successful reference" then I strongly disagree. I can speak about a cat named Cookie till the end of my life, but that doesn't mean I'm referring to any real living animal. — Metaphysician Undercover
Not all successful reference by naming practices picks out living animals Meta. Cookie is my cat though; one of them... — creativesoul
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