Use of (spatiotemporal) distinction is not seeing something as distinct? — Janus
If Hesperus=Phosphorus is necessary a posteriori, then these two proper names can't be de jure rigid designators, which one can grasp without any descriptive content. — frank
Rigid designators are graspable without any descriptive content. — frank
For Kripke, the Metre is a rigid designator for a certain length, and hence the same in all possible worlds. — Banno
I'm trying to grasp the challenge to Kripke's necessary a posteriori brought by Kripke himself in A Problem of Belief:
If Hesperus=Phosphorus is necessary a posteriori, then these two proper names can't be de jure rigid designators, which one can grasp without any descriptive content.
If they are such rigid designators, then the identity statement can't be necessarily true. — frank
Prima facie, this looks to be plain false, given that 'we' (scare quotes because I was not consulted) have changed the designation. Presumably, the new designation is more rigid than the rigidity of the lump of stuff that was previously designated. We can now measure what was immeasurable. — unenlightened
Banno suggested waiting till after the third lecture to discuss A Puzzle of Belief. I hope youre still around to help clarify. — frank
Or kidnapped and held in an ugly part of London. — frank
It rather means that this name, as used by us, today, in the actual world, refers to the same object in (our talk of) all possible worlds. — Pierre-Normand
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