You're talking about something completely different. I'm responding to @RogueAI talking about idealism-water, which is not in fact H2O, because H2O must be a substance.I think the difference mainly shows up when we're talking about what people know or believe. — frank
Water and H2O are two different things because one can intelligently talk about water without knowing anything about chemistry. For example, "that water tastes OK". To talk intelligently about H2O, on the other hand, requires some background knowledge of chemistry. Of course, someone who doesn't know anything about chemistry can say, "That H2O looks cloudy", but if you ask them what they mean by "H2O", they won't be able to talk intelligently about it. — RogueAI
Frank, Shawn, what is a good resource for a primer on this stuff? Is Kripke pretty accessible? — RogueAI
one can intelligently talk about water without knowing anything about chemistry. — RogueAI
H20 is water, but water is not necessarily H20.
— Fooloso4
Not according to Kripke, but as I explained, this is not the issue being raised in the OP. — frank
Water and H20 can mean two different things and refer to two different objects. — Fooloso4
But to tell the truth I don't know what the issue being raised in the OP is. It does not seem to be the same issue raised in subsequent posts. — Fooloso4
You could do some reading about Kripke and intensional definition, then start threads. — frank
Intensional logic attempts to study both designation and meaning and investigate the relationships between them.
In the example I gave both the designation and meaning are different, that is, both the extension and intension are different. — Fooloso4
I quoted this in my post:I don't know what you're talking about. — frank
Again, RogueAI is explaining why H2O and water mean different things. But his explanation is that, under idealism, H2O doesn't exist, since H2O has to be a substance.H2O only refers to a physical substance. — RogueAI
I have a feeling you're not even having a conversation with me. Why then do you reply?That's going overboard to find a wedge to drive between the terms.
It's much easier than that. — frank
If I grant this, then the explanation is wrong. H2O can be an idealistic substance.Idealism doesn't have to be substanceless. — frank
But for this to be an explanation we need to fit some relevance criteria. So long as we're world building, let's grant "this" universe is materialistic. And let's just imagine a universe B the same as this one, except "water" in universe B refers to what we would call a cow. So now in universe B, water is not H2O. But that doesn't quite sound like it should be relevant to the nature of meaning in "this" universe; it sounds, rather, that universe-B-water is simply a different kind of thing than this-universe-water.We could conjure a kind of idealism that allows water, but not H20. — frank
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