From LOJBAN%CUVMB.BITNET@uga.cc.uga.edu Fri Mar 24 21:00:57 1995 From: ucleaar Date: Fri Mar 24 21:00:57 1995 Subject: Re: On {lo} and existence In-Reply-To: (Your message of Wed, 22 Mar 95 11:59:41 EST.) Status: RO Message-ID: Jorge: > > > You seem to be saying that the meaning of a predicate depends on context, > > > which is very true for natlangs. I suppose it will be true for Lojban as > > > well. > > I don't think I'm saying this. At least not if we're using a > > truth-conditional rather than psychological model of semantics. > I'm lost again. Are there propositions independently of there being > a world (or worlds)? I guess so. They're like numbers. They just exist. There are no conditions on their existence, and so no circumstances under which a given proposition does not exist. > Consider a simple sentence: {da blanu}. How can you associate a proposition > to it unless you know the meaning of the word "blanu"? How can this word > have meaning without there being a world out there (with real and imaginary > components) with things that satisfy the predicate or don't? Am I saying otherwise? > You talk of "proposition634" as if it had a referent outside the world, > but to me the world consists of all referents, so the referent of > "proposition634" cannot be outside of it, by definition of world. Are you > using a more restricted definition of "world"? I don't think of a proposition having a referent. It's more like a state of affairs, an it-being-the-case-that-p. It's not a kind of sentence. And I am using a more restricted definition of "world" than you - a world contains only real things. But I don't think that makes much difference, for while you say no proposition can be outside *the* world, I would say no proposition is outside every world. If you're happier merging my infinite multiplicity of worlds into one, that's okay. > How do you determine whether a referent is or is not in the world? You inspect the only-real world. > In your proposition true(prop23, world73, 1), are the referents of > "prop23" and "world73" in the same world? They don't have referents. Prop23 is in world73. Lest it is not dazzlingly obvious, I shd point out that I am pretty much making most of this stuff up as I go along (tho it nonetheless makes sense to me). I'm not bringing to bear long hours or years of thought on the question, and nor am I bringing to bear much more than short minutes of reading on the question. I share the fairly mainstream view that as far as psychologically real accounts of meaning go, truth-conditionality is a sometimes methodologically useful fiction, the philosophical underpinnings of which aren't terribly important. But, all that said, I'm happy to continue this thread. --- And