MIT24 251F11 Lec04
MIT24 251F11 Lec04
Simplifying a little, 'The F is G' is analyzed as ∃x (Fx & ∀y (Fy ⊃ y=x) & Gx).
This appears to solve Frege’s four problems: Informativeness of Identity, Meaningful Empty Terms, Non-
Existence Claims, and Attitude Attributions.
At least, it solves them when they are construed as problems about definite descriptions. But Frege raises
them as problems for names. What’s the relevance, then?
Russell’s “Name Claim”: Names are almost all definite descriptions in disguise. ‘Pegasus’ is just an
abbreviation of ‘the winged horse that did so and so.’
Uniqueness. ‘The F is G’ does not require for its truth that there be at most one F.
‘The book is on the table,’ ‘The square root of 9 is odd,' 'A dog walked in; the dog barked.'....
Existence. ‘The F is G’ doesn’t say there is at least one F; it isn't false if no Fs exist.
‘The Mayor of Idaho is forgetful,’ ‘The largest prime number is over ten,’…
Descriptiveness. ‘The F is G’ doesn’t require that the so-called F really be an F; that's often irrelevant.
‘The King is in the counting house,’ ‘The man with the martini is a philosopher,’…
Uniqueness
1) Maybe ‘The F is G’ is short for ‘The FH is G’ and at most one thing is FH.
2) Maybe 'the F' stands for the F that is currently most salient.
3) Quantifier restriction; maybe it stands for the one F in the current domain of discourse.
Existence
1) Sometimes it does too seem false in the absence of an F. 'The King of France owes me $5.'
2) The intuition of gappiness may just reflect that 'The F is G' is false for the wrong kind of reason.
Descriptiveness
1) 'The martini man is a philosopher' is false; the speaker said something true with it.
2) Maybe 'the F' in context is short for 'the one assumed to be F.'
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Russell's Name Claim: 'n' means 'the F'. Objections.
1. No known F
2. No shared F
I may associate a different description with n than you do. I think of Twain as the author of
Huck Finn and you think of him as the author of Tom Sawyer. If I say 'Twain was honest' and
you say 'Twain was dishonest,' we aren't necessarily disagreeing!
Replies. To 1. The description gets wide scope. Or, it's 'the actual author of such and such books.'
To 2. Same. 'As for the most famous philosopher, he is necessarily descended from Lord Russell.'
To 3. You've chosen the wrong description. Maybe it's 'the guy originally dubbed 'Godel'.'
To 4. Same. It's not a priori that the guy originally dubbed 'Godel' was a mathematician.
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