Consul
It depends on whether you think that reference is existence-entailing, such that if x refers to y, both x and y exist. Anyway, my point is that the subject matter of "Vixens are female foxes" are vixens rather than linguistic or mental representations of vixens. And the subject matter of "Centaurs are men with horse's legs" are centaurs rather than linguistic or mental representations of centaurs. That vixens exist and centaurs don't doesn't make any difference.
I think some references are existence entailing, some aren't. Which is which is important if we are discussing the synthetic.
I think our understanding of 'centaurs' includes the notion that they are creatures of imagination; if we say something like '
centaurs have hooves' and meant '
centaurs have hooves (and centaurs and their hooves exist)', exactly like '
foxes have fur', then we need to make this unusual meaning clear. Because it would be right for somebody to respond '
centaurs that exist and have hooves are not centaurs, because centaurs are fabulous'
General statements of the form "Xs are Ys" (or "An X is a Y") are logically interpreted as universally quantified conditional statements: "For all z, if z is X, then z is Y." And such statements lack existential import. "Vixens are female foxes" is synonymous with "For all x, if x is a vixen, then x is a female fox", which statement doesn't imply the existence of vixens.
I agree with this.
And, again, the subject matters of "Vixens are female foxes" and "'Vixen' means 'female fox'" are different: a statement about vixens is not a (metalinguistic) statement about "vixen".
I also agree, except that as I mentioned earlier, in normal speech "
Vixens are female foxes" is ambiguous; it can be understood as the second. (You needed to rephrase it and use quotes to make it clear what you meant.)
If I say vixens is a 'concept' it is to allow that words are not nailed to sensory objects. As I say above, both 'vixen' and 'centaur' are nouns, both have particular ideas associated with them, yet they are different sorts of things.
I looked at your quotes. The first one seemed to beg the particular question we are discussing, by talking about 'analytical truths'. If we say we are discussing truths, then we will read all our examples as being the sort of things that can be either true or false, but in this discussion we were questioning whether certain sorts of propositions were propositions at all, i.e. whether they had any meaning that could be true or false. As I suggested in another post, if we substituted the examples used in the quote for ones involving 'God', I don't think the argument would look so convincing.
Anyway, as I said earlier, it isn't that I disagree with you, it is that I don't think it affects my argument that a statement about a 'possible being' can qualify as a 'synthetic a priori', which was where I came in.
-- Updated May 13th, 2014, 5:14 pm to add the following --
Yes I do recognize that natural language differs in certain respects from formal logic, but I don't agree that logic is independent from language, in fact logic is derived from the natural language, the whole point of doing logic is to formalize our ordinary ways of thinking, so logic really derives it's meaning from the natural language.
I disagree. I think it is like maths. You point out later in your quote:
Just take Russell's "on denoting" that I mentioned earlier (that you seem to be familiar with), and how he used Frege's newly invented predicate calculus to solve philosophical problems by analyzing the logical structure of ordinary language statements.
But he concludes from this that a lot of what constutes normal language is meaningless or ambiguous (and hence a lot of philosophical problems are unreal). In order to use logic on language you need to create a 'logical language' (see Wittgenstein).
The point is that everybody knows that there are truths about possible objects. Again it would be crazy to deny that there are going to exist new people in the future which don't exist today (and we can know a lot of things about them, such as that they are going to have hearts, taller then 2 cm etc.), so it's not a contentious philosophical theory but a self evident fact about reality.
'Possible object' seems to have shifted in meaning.
Yes, we can say things about '
people in the future' because you have specified that they will be '
people' and we know what goes with being a person. If you added to this description and said
'blue eyed people in the future' we would also know they would have blue eyes. But the 'truths' we are discovering are limited to the ones you provide. If I go outside those boundaries and ask questions like '
Do we know for a fact these people in the future will exist?' the answer is '
No'. (Maybe the world will have ended etc.)
And suppose my possible object is 'Martians'. What truths can we discover about them? OK, they don't exist, but neither do 'people of the future', so surely what we can do with 'possible people' we should be able to do with 'possible Martians'.
It's an open question whether God is a possible object (or actual for that matter), but how is that relevant?
It means he cannot be turned into a term that can be processed in a truth table. Such terms have to be capable of being either true or false; since we don't know what God might be, we can't know what the difference between a true or a false statement about him would be - if anything!
In the sorts of discussion we have on these boards, this is our problem. We don't agree on what terms (e.g. 'a priori') mean. Logic and truth tables can't come in until we have fixed a meaning, but fixing a meaning is the difficult bit. It is like maths; great at working out any given sum, but the problem is formulating the sum that matches the real world problem.
Actually, we can even talk about impossible objects such as "there are no people who are taller then themselves", "there are no square circles" etc.
Talk: yes. Make sense; no! 'No people' is not an object. 'No square circles' is not an object either. Again, the introduction of the word 'are' might suggest existence of a 'thing', but it applies to the negative term that immediately follows. Just as to say something '
is not' isn't an oxymoron, that
'is' does not contradict the '
not'.
Another misleading feature in ordinary speach might come from treating 'no', meaning zero, as another number. '
We have no bananas' is understandable, but makes no logical sense. The same would be true of '
there are no people'.