Peter Holmes wrote: ↑April 7th, 2020, 1:13 pm
But denotation is not a two-way relationship.
Not sure what you're saying there. "Two-way relationship"?
Or do you hold to a mistaken correspondence theory?
Methinks you don't understand what the correspondence theory is. It is a theory that holds that the "structure of language" mirrors the "structure of reality," or that truth is the correspondence of a proposition with a fact:
"Narrowly speaking, the correspondence theory of truth is the view that truth is correspondence to, or with, a fact—a view that was advocated by Russell and Moore early in the 20th century. But the label is usually applied much more broadly to any view explicitly embracing the idea that truth consists in a relation to reality, i.e., that truth is a relational property involving a characteristic relation (to be specified) to some portion of reality (to be specified)."
The correspondence theory does not deal with the correspondence of nouns with the set of objects they denote, which is obvious and not controversial.
And this is definitely not the 'is' of predication. It's not a property of dogs that we call them dogs. What an absurd idea!
Ah, apparently you're restricting the term "property" to a narrow class of properties, similarly to the way you restrict "exists" to a narrow class of existents. Yes, it is the "is" of predication, and, yes, that dogs are the meaning of the word "dog" is a property of dogs, just as "Capital of France" is a property of Paris, "Home of the Mets" is a property of Shea Stadium, and if Bruno has a niece or nephew, "is an uncle" is a property of Bruno.
Properties of things are simply those confirmable facts which can be truly predicated of them.
We use the word 'dog' to name and talk about the things we call dogs. But those things don't identify, categorise, name or describe - themselves. We do those things when we talk about them.
Well, you're right there. Things don't categorize, name, or describe themselves. And of course, I didn't suggest they did. Words are human inventions, coined, more or less arbitrarily, to denote things in the world. The class of things so denoted by a word is the denotational meaning of that word.