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    Kripke's modal arguments show that proper names are rigid... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→The sense of a proper name is objective, not merely subjective like an idea, yet is distinct from the reference (the object itself)

    Kripke's modal arguments show that proper names are rigid designators tracking objects across possible worlds without descriptive sense.

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    1 reason for
    1 reason against

    Reasons For

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    Reason for
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    • 1.The intuition that 'Aristotle' refers to the same person across possible worlds independent of his properties supports rigid designation.
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    • 2.Kripke's modal arguments show descriptive theories fail: the same description picks different objects in different possible worlds.
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    • 3.Scientific identities (water = H2O) require rigid designators to express necessary truths about what things fundamentally are.
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    Reasons Against

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    Reason against
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    • 1.Names appear to acquire reference through historical-causal chains involving descriptions, undermining the pure rigidity picture.
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    • 2.Distinguishing rigid designation from descriptive content may be unclear: speaker intentions always involve some conceptual criteria.
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    • 3.Cross-world identity of objects itself requires criteria of identity—names alone don't settle which counterpart is 'the same' object.
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    Truth & Knowledge1 linkedPhilosophy of Language1 linked

    Related

    Cross-world identity of objects itself requires criteria of identity—names alone...Distinguishing rigid designation from descriptive content may be unclear: speake...Kripke's modal arguments show descriptive theories fail: the same description pi...Names appear to acquire reference through historical-causal chains involving des...
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    Scientific identities (water = H2O) require rigid designators to express necessa...The intuition that 'Aristotle' refers to the same person across possible worlds ...The sense of a proper name is objective, not merely subjective like an idea, yet...

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