On Naming and Necessity (1980). What's the relationship between language and the world? Specifically, what makes a name or a class term (like "tiger") pick out the person or things that it does? Saul Kripke wanted to correct the dominant view of his time (which involved speakers having some description in mind, and it's that description that hooks the word to the thing), and Continue Reading …
Topic for #126: Saul Kripke on Possibilities, Language, and Science
On 10/11/15 we were rejoined by Elucidations' Matt Teichman to talk about one of the most readable yet still very weird texts in the canon of analytic philosophy, Saul Kripke's Naming and Necessity, which is a series of three lectures from 1972, adapted into a book that was published in 1980. It starts off talking about a topic that seems obscure: Why do words refer to the Continue Reading …