GE Morton wrote: ↑February 21st, 2020, 7:32 pm
Using have/has doesn't obliterate the distinction between sensible properties and imputed properties. "Alfie has a bald head" is a sensible property, confirmable by examining Alfie. "Alfie has a degree in philosophy" is an imputed property. Confirming it requires examining some school records, not Alfie.
I'm not disagreeing with this. I'm pointing out that it's irrelevant. Whether it's a "sensible" or "imputed" property doesn't change the fact that the properties in those examples are properties the "item" in question possesses. That's not the case with "objective proposition." The proposition doesn't possess the property of being non-mental, whether you say that it's a sensible or an imputed property.
A proposition "has" (or does not have) the imputed property of being objective in the same sense that Alfie "has" a degree in philosophy. In both cases the proposition asserting the property is true if certain external facts involving the subject of the proposition are true.
What it is to have a property is nothing about a proposition being true. What it is to have a property is a physical fact about the item in question. Alfie having the property of having a degree in philosophy means that Alfie did certain things, was awarded certain things, etc.
A proposition, however, can't
do something extramental, can't be awarded something extramental, etc.
The proposition can be ABOUT something extramental, but that doesn't make the proposition itself extramental in any regard. That's a use/mention confusion.