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Preliminaries • A semantic argument is a deductive argument from some theory of meaning. So, the argument’s conclusion is entailed by one or more premises about meaning • I propose a semantic argument for the ontological claim that there are no universally held real properties • A property is universally held if and only if everything has it • Thus the ontological claim can be phrased as: ∀P(Real(P) → ∃x¬P(x)) • A property is real if it adds something to (or is a modification of) its bearer. Properties that are not real are called Cambridge properties o Some examples of real properties: being red, being triangular, being a man, being a table, being material, being contingent, being in love, knowing that 1+1=2 o Some examples of Cambridge properties: being the only thing in the world, being to the south of Paris, being loved by Brigitte, being thought of by Mark, being self-identical, being such that 1+1=2 A theory of meaning • The class of linguistic expressions includes terms. There are two types of terms o Singular terms (e.g., proper names such as John and definite descriptions such as the president of the United States) o General terms (e.g, man, table, red and gold) • As Frege famously pointed out, evening star and morning star refer to the same thing without having the same meaning. The same holds for many other cases, such as Obama and president of the United States • So, in (neo-)Fregean linguistics, terms have a meaning (intension, content, mode of presentation) and a reference (extension, designation). A term expresses its meaning and designates its reference • As a special case, consider Jo. Jo decides to assign abc and xyz as proper names for his iPhone. In these cases of (Kripkean) ostensive definition, the meaning of abc is (the singleton set containing) Jo’s iPhone. And the same holds for xyz • In all above cases, the meaning of a term fixes its reference A theory of meaning (cont.) • Consider terms that are either o Singular (e.g., Jo, Kim, king of the Netherlands, president of the United States), o Generic and stand for a real property (e.g., red, material, unicorn, triangular), or o Generic and stand for everything (e.g, being, existent, thing, object, entity) • Plausibly, these terms express a positive determinate meaning • Moreover, these positive determinate meanings are, plausibly, composed of positive determinate meaning elements Examples The meaning elements of king of the Netherlands are king and the Netherlands (More precisely: the meaning elements of the meaning expressed by the term king of the Netherlands are the meanings expressed by the terms king and the Netherlands) The meaning elements of unicorn are a.o. horn, forehead, tail and horseshoe A theory of meaning (cont.) • Consider terms that are either o Singular (e.g., Jo, Kim, king of the Netherlands, president of the United States), o Generic and stand for a real property (e.g., red, material, unicorn, triangular), or o Generic and stand for everything (e.g, being, existent, thing, object, entity) • Plausibly, these terms express a positive determinate meaning • Moreover, these positive determinate meanings are, plausibly, composed of positive determinate meaning elements Examples The meaning elements of evening star are evening and star The meaning elements of Alvin Plantinga are Alvin and Plantinga The meaning elements of being, red, abc and Kim are being, red, abc and Kim A theory of meaning (cont.) • Each positive determinate meaning element has a reference set (e.g., the reference set of red is the set of all red things, the reference set of John is the set of all John’s) • More generally, each positive determinate meaning has a reference set o The reference set RefSet(M) of a positive determinate meaning M is the union of the reference sets of M’s meaning elements RefSet(M) = ∪ { RefSet(M) | M is a meaning element of M } i i Examples Take the meaning expressed by unicorn. The reference set of that meaning is the set of all horns, all foreheads, all tails, all horseshoe’s, etc. Take the meaning expressed by president of the United States. The reference set of that meaning is the set of all presidents and the United States Take the meaning expressed by evening star. The reference set of that meaning is the set of all evenings and all stars Take the meaning expressed by abc. The reference set of that meaning is Jo’s iPhone
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