What do you mean by a term? — The Great Whatever
I imagine that it's a similar feeling to what happens when the uninitiated read some of some of Heidegger or Derrida for the first time. — StreetlightX
The closest thing - that I know of - in formal logic that thinks along these lines in dialetheic logic — StreetlightX
To be absolutely clear, to deny the law of identity isn't - for me anyway - to say that 'things aren't equal to themselves', but to deny that the very category of equality is properly applicable to 'things' at all; that is, it is a category error as such to invoke equality (whether it be to affirm or deny it) when speaking ontologically, other than as a heuristic of everyday speech. Or differently again: there is nothing 'equal' or 'unequal' in nature, no identities. And even in everyday speech, equality is always invoked respect to some quality or another, rather than as a 'brute fact' of identity, as it were. — StreetlightX
What classical logic does so is force you to specify a domain. But a domain is filled with actual things, after all, and if their identity is somehow not determinate, then the choice of the domain sill simply reflect that. I don't think the logic forces you to make this decision. The issues about identity seem to be just to have to do with simple rules of language, such as coreferential expressions preserving truth when swapped out for each other, or the intuitive 'logical truth' of all appropriate statements of the form 'I'm myself.' — The Great Whatever
. Taken seriously at face value, it's clearly false: people do in everyday speech treat things as if they are themselves, and it's not clear behaviorally what the opposite would look like. — The Great Whatever
As far as equality being invoked with respect to some quality, do you mean things like 'the same statue' versus 'the same lump of clay'? If so, you might be interested in Gupta relative identity. — The Great Whatever
On this though, I'd have to disagree. I don't think that at any point during our usual day to day activity, we go around thinking 'that thing there is what it is!' — StreetlightX
To say that a thing is identical to itself, when you think about it, is an exceedingly strange formulation. Wittgenstein had something of this intuition when he declared quite flatly in the Tractatus that "roughly speaking: to say of two things that they are identical is nonsense, and to say of one thing that it is identical with itself is to say nothing." — StreetlightX
No, but people say things like, Mr. Jones is Adam. They're the same person. And so if Mr. Jones went to the bathroom, Adam went to the bathroom. — The Great Whatever
It's the difference between x=x and x=y — StreetlightX
But I don't agree that is what people commonly have in mind in their acknowledgment that a thing may have two or more names. — John
One might learn something new upon learning that Adam is Mr. Jones. Not so that Mr. Jones is Mr. Jones. — StreetlightX
He is Adam. — The Great Whatever
Or put differently, the identity Mr. Jones = Alan does not 'stand alone', it is always identity 'with respect to.. x,y,z'. — StreetlightX
He is not Adam — John
I'm myself (and no one else). — The Great Whatever
But TGW cannot be a unique identity, because someone else, a million others, could also be TGW. — John
So what is it with respect to, in this case? — The Great Whatever
Also note that the fact that we can learn something about language use by uttering or assenting to these sentences doesn't detract from the fact that we are asserting the identity of a thing with itself. — The Great Whatever
This simply strikes me as a kind of transcendental illusion, in the Kantian sense. We can say, in a kind of derivative manner, that to assert that Alan = Mr. Jones is to assert the identity of a thing with itself, but the very notion of identity is still a logical category imposed upon an 'existential situation' in which questions of identity or lackthereof are simply absent to begin with. — StreetlightX
If being TGW has any uniqueness it is parasitic upon being a unique entity that is called 'TGW". — John
Would you not still be a unique entity and identity if you were stranded on an island and had amnesia? — John
If you have thirty names are they all exactly equivalent of you are called these different names by a different sets of people? — John
Is your whole identity expressed by your online name TGW or by your everyday name? — John
But what does it matter whether identity is an imposed category? Have I argued for any specific construal of what numerical identity is? I've only tried to show that your Wittgenstein-inspired comment that to say a thing is identical to itself is nonsensical, is wrong, as is the claim that in ordinary situations we don't do this. — The Great Whatever
(I take) Wittgenstein's comment to apply to statements of identity that do not refer to an identity parameter. And it is the case the those sorts of comments are 'useless propositions'. — StreetlightX
No name is equivalent to me — The Great Whatever
No, no, it's not that people don't assert identity. Of course they do, they do so all the time. But the question isn't about assertion it's about ontology, as it were. As I understand it, to say that 'Mr. Jones is Alan' is to learn a fact about language-use: upon knowing this, I know that Mr. Jones might respond to the call 'Alan!' as he would to the call 'Mr. Jones'. Or that documents which refer to Mr. Jones or Adam actually refer to the same person, and so on. In all cases, there is some kind of parameter by which to make sense of the identity of Mr. Jones and Alan. Or put differently, the identity Mr. Jones = Alan does not 'stand alone', it is always identity 'with respect to.. x,y,z'. And the function of names is ostensibly for identification in social settings, bureaucratic identification, etc. — StreetlightX
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