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    The sense of a name is a condition which the referent uni... — Carmelics
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    Supports→Coreferential names can differ in sense
    Supports→Names have the same meanings as definite descriptions

    The sense of a name is a condition which the referent uniquely satisfies

    Philosophy of Language
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    Philosophy of Language

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    Any given object uniquely satisfies more than one conditionBoth names and definite descriptions function to identify a unique object via a ...Coreferential names can differ in senseDefinite descriptions (phrases of the form 'the so-and-so') pick out the unique ...

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    Names have the same meanings as definite descriptions

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    Proper names must have a sense, not merely a referent.85%Proper names carry two kinds of sense: a particular sense and an assoc...83%The Millian-Russellian holds that the content of a name is its referen...82%The sense of a proper name is objective, not merely subjective like an...81%

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    But even if this tells us when names differ in sense, it does not quite tell us what the sense of a name is. Here is one initially plausible way of explaining what the sense of a name is. We know that, whatever the content of a name is, it must be something which determines as a reference the object for which the name stands; and we know that, if Fregeanism is true, this must be something other than the object itself. A natural thought, then, is that the content of a name—its sense—is some condi

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