Peter Holmes wrote: ↑April 9th, 2020, 6:15 am
2 Please explain the supposedly obvious corespondence between the word 'snow' and the stuff we call snow. Please explain the supposed agreement, similarity, harmony, close connection or equivalence between those two things. (These are dictionary 'equivalents' for the word 'correspondence'.)
Well, first, those words are not
equivalents (synonyms) of "correspondence," though one or more of them can be substituted for it in certain contexts. The relevant sense of "correspond" here is correlation:
"Definition of correlate (intransitive verb):
"1a: to bear reciprocal or mutual relations : CORRESPOND
"If two things correlate, a change in one thing results in a similar or opposite change in the other thing.
"(transitive verb):
"1a: to establish a mutual or reciprocal relation between"
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/correlate
In the case of "snow," the correlation consists in the fact that that word is used to denote that "stuff" in English-speaking speech communities. It does not entail that there is any similarity, equivalence, etc., between the word and the things it denotes.
Well, I didn't say that the word "Paris" is a property of the city. However, "is called 'Paris'" IS a property of the city, just as, "is the capital of France" is a property of the city. So is, "is (one of) the meaning(s) of the word "Paris."
Once again, this is conflating and confusing two completely different things. A property is a feature of reality, not the predicate of a declarative clause, such as 'is called Paris'. To repeat: a thing's name is not a property of that thing.
I can't believe this is so hard to get across. I just agreed that a word, a name, is not a property of a thing. What IS a property of a thing is the fact that a particular city is called "Paris" in some speech community. That is an empirical, verifiable, "feature of reality" --- as real as that the city is the capital of France. So I assume you are still restricting the word "property" to some narrow class of attributes predicable of things. That restriction is arbitrary and inconsistent with common uses and understandings of
that term. That Alfie is married is a property of Alfie; that he was born in Sweden is a property of Alfie; that he is a philosophy professor is a property of Alfie; that he was named "Alfie" by his parents and is called "Alfie" in a certain speech community are properties of Alfie.
I assume that narrow class of attributes you're willing to call "properties" are the physical properties of a thing --- Alfie's height, weight, hair and eye color, etc. Surely you realize how incomplete and uninformative such a limited description of Alfie would be.
Nope, you misunderstand the meaning of 'property' and 'predicate' (noun) and 'predicate' (verb) in this context. Naming and describing are completely separate and different linguistic operations.
They are different, but not completely separate. Whenever you name something you
add something to its description. You add a new property.
"We have a new puppy. We got him from the pound. He is a Spaniel-Schnauzer mix, brown and white, with floppy Spaniel ears and a short, wiry Schnauzer coat. We've named him Rosco."
His name is now one of his properties, just like his former home, his ears, color, etc.
The name 'Peter' doesn't describe me in any way whatsoever.
What!? Of course it does. It is very likely the most definitive, widely relied-upon property used for identifying you. Someone trying to find you will not be looking for people with a certain height and weight. They will look up your name in the phone book.
You need to forget all the metaphyical/ontological nonsense surrounding the concept of a "property." A property of a thing is simply any confirmable fact about or observable feature of a thing that helps us identify a thing and distinguish it from other things. There are, to be sure, different classes or categories of properties, such as "local" and "non-local." Local properties are those that can be determined by observing the thing; non-local properties require confirmation of some fact beyond the thing. "Alfie is bald" is an example of the former; "Alfie is Swedish" is an example of the latter.
Your misunderstanding - and the mistake of correpondence theories - is that there are two sets of things with a one (or more)-to-one relationship between them, so that the linguistic operation of naming is a simple (what you call 'obvious') matter of hooking up elements in one set with one (or sometimes more than one) element in the other set. The delusion is that features of reality organise themselves in the way that we organise (identify, categorise, name and describe) them using language.
Are you claiming that there is not a 1-to-1 correspondence between the word "dog" and the set of domestic canines? And of course "features of reality" don't "organize themselves" into sets or classes or categories. Organizing "reality" is something WE do, in order to understand it and communicate about it. Where did I ever claim that reality "organizes itself"? Are you claiming that in order for there to be a correspondence between two (or more) sets or things, they must somehow "organize themselves"?
I'm still not sure what you're getting at with that "two-way" "quantify themselves" business.
There is no relationship between a fired arrow and its target? Do you think the archer would agree with that?
Think about it. Does an arrow identify, define and delimit its own target? Does a name identify, define and delimit what it names? This delusion - mistaking what we say about things for the way things are - the myth of propositions - runs very deep - for many of us for most of the time, too deep to recognise and neutralise. You're not alone.
No, the arrow does not choose its target. Why do you think that is necessary? The "way things are" (in that case) is that the archer has chosen a target for the arrow. That is what establishes a relationship, a correlation or correspondence, between the arrow and the target. The mistake here is your supposition that what we say about things or how we interact with things is not part of "reality." They are not only features of "reality,"
they define it.