Yes, but there must be some true things said about it if we are to successfully refer to it; otherwise reference itself would become meaningless... — Janus
That sounds interesting! Unfortunately i know little about Frege, so I am not clear as to how he might have thought that information (in the human social and semantic context) could differ from story telling or description. — Janus
So you know that it is called "X"? You know that what is called "X"? Is it called 'X' only by you, or by others as well? — Janus
So you know what it is that you are calling 'X'? — Janus
Seems as though "that' must be nothing, in which case you are referring to nothing, which amounts ot not referring at all, as far as I can tell. Or, if "that" is not nothing, and yet not anything either imagined or sensed, then what is it? — Janus
So Hesperus turns out to be Phosphorus. Yet "Hesperus", being a rigid designator, refers to Hesperus in all possible worlds.
But Hesperus is Phosphorus.
Hence, "Hesperus" refers to Phosphorus in all possible worlds.
Puzzling. — Banno
But I've been saying all along that description is only required in order to know what we refer to, in those cases where the object referred to is not present. — Janus
If the object is present and you are pointing at it then you must know something about it, in any case. — Janus
strikes me as strictly incorrect, because Hesperus is Phosphorus in all possible words.before we knew that Hesperus is Phosphorus (i.e. that they are one and the same planet) it was epistemically possible (consistently with all we knew) that they might not have been the same planet — Pierre-Normand
Do you hold that they already know something about the object they are pointing at? — creativesoul
strikes me as strictly incorrect, because Hesperus is Phosphorus in all possible words. — Banno
Instead, what might have happened is that we named Hesperus and Phosphorus "Hesperus", while naming something else "Phosphorus".
Well, again, that's epistemically possible, and still not metaphysically possible. That's the relevant distinction, it seems to me. — Pierre-Normand
But there are epistemically possible worlds in which what we believe to be the referents of 'Hesperus' and 'Phosphorus' aren't the same object — Pierre-Normand
They have picked out whatever they point at from the rest of the environment; they know it as distinct. — Janus
In any case when toddlers point to objects, how do you know they want to ask "What's that?". — Janus
I would not not go so far as to say that all use of spatiotemporal distinction is equivalent to knowing something as distinct. — creativesoul
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