Department of History and Philosophy of Science
Eotvos University
Budapest, Pazmany P. setany 1/A
PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE SEMINAR
(http://hps.elte.hu/seminar)
________________________________________________
26 November 4:00 PM 6th floor 6.54
(Language: English)
R y s z a r d W o j c i c k i
Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academe of Sciences,
Warsaw
MULTI-REFERENTIAL SEMANTICS
The talk is related to some results I have presented in my book on
consequence operation published by Kluwer. We expect consequence
operation
to preserve truth. Now the idea of truth might be in a sense
"multidimentional". Depending on a reference point one might view the
same
sentence as either true of false.
I shall focus on informal (philosophical) questions rather than formal
ones.
The organizer of the seminar: László E. Szabó
--
Laszlo E. Szabo
Department of Theoretical Physics
Department of History and Philosophy of Science
Eotvos University, Budapest
H-1518 Budapest, Pf. 32, Hungary
Phone/Fax: (36-1)372-2924
Home: (36-1) 200-7318
Mobil/SMS: (36) 20-366-1172
http://hps.elte.hu/~leszabo
*-----------------------------------------------------------------------*
| A FIZINFO a fizikus informacios rendszer resze
|
|
|
| Cikk, hozzaszolas a
|
|
|
| Fizinfo(a)lists.kfki.hu
|
|
|
| cimre kuldheto. Ilyenkor a subject-sorba a cikk cimet kell irni.
|
| A cikk szovege a level torzse. Ez sima szoveg legyen!
|
|
|
| Informacio: http://sunserv.kfki.hu/mailman/listinfo/fizinfo
|
|
|
| A beerkezo levelek feldolgozasat program vegzi. Az emberi valaszt
|
| igenylo kerest, kerdest az alabbi cimek valamelyikere lehet megirni:
|
|
|
| Jenik Livia jenik(a)rmki.kfki.hu
|
| Kiraly Peterne kiraly(a)sunserv.kfki.hu
|
|
|
*-----------------------------------------------------------------------*
Tisztelt kollegak,
az ELTE BTK Logika tanszekenek szeminariuman,
november 26-an, hetfon 1/4 7-kor
a Bp. V. Pesti B. u. 1. felem. 23. szobaban
megvitatjuk Frakas Katalin mellekelt cikket. Erdeklodoket szivesen latunk.
mate andras
==============================================================================
Andras Mate CSc, assoc. prof.
Inst. Philosophy, Dept. Logic
Lorand Eotvos University Budapest, Faculty of Arts and Humanities
H-1364 Budapest, POB 107
Phone: (36 1) 266 9100/5328 -- Phone/Fax/Answ: (36 1) 266 4195
e-mail: andras.mate(a)elte.hu
Home: H-1152 Budapest, Kinizsi u. 132. / Phone: (36 1) 306 0584
{\rtf1\ansi \deff4\deflang1033{\fonttbl{\f4\froman\fcharset238\fprq2 Times New Roman CE;}}{\colortbl;\red0\green0\blue0;\red0\green0\blue255;\red0\green255\blue255;\red0\green255\blue0;\red255\green0\blue255;
\red255\green0\blue0;\red255\green255\blue0;\red255\green255\blue255;\red0\green0\blue128;\red0\green128\blue128;\red0\green128\blue0;\red128\green0\blue128;\red128\green0\blue0;\red128\green128\blue0;\red128\green128\blue128;\red192\green192\blue192;}
{\stylesheet{\f4\lang1038 \snext0 Normal;}{\*\cs10 \additive Default Paragraph Font;}{\s15\tqc\tx4536\tqr\tx9072 \f4\lang1038 \sbasedon0\snext15 footer;}{\*\cs16 \additive\sbasedon10 page number;}}{\info{\author M\'e1t\'e9 Andr\'e1s}
{\operator M\'e1t\'e9 Andr\'e1s}{\creatim\yr2001\mo10\dy10\hr14\min38}{\revtim\yr2001\mo10\dy10\hr14\min41}{\printim\yr2001\mo10\dy10\hr14\min41}{\version2}{\edmins2}{\nofpages0}{\nofwords0}{\nofchars0}{\vern49205}}
\paperw11906\paperh16838\margl1417\margr1417\margt1417\margb1417 \deftab708\widowctrl\ftnbj\aenddoc\hyphhotz425\formshade \fet0\sectd \linex0\headery709\footery709\colsx709\endnhere {\footer \pard\plain \s15\tqc\tx4536\tqr\tx9072\pvpara\phmrg\posxc\posy0
\f4\lang1038 {\field{\*\fldinst {\cs16 PAGE }}{\fldrslt {\cs16 7}}}{\cs16
\par }\pard \s15\tqc\tx4536\tqr\tx9072
\par }{\*\pnseclvl1\pnucrm\pnstart1\pnindent720\pnhang{\pntxta .}}{\*\pnseclvl2\pnucltr\pnstart1\pnindent720\pnhang{\pntxta .}}{\*\pnseclvl3\pndec\pnstart1\pnindent720\pnhang{\pntxta .}}{\*\pnseclvl4\pnlcltr\pnstart1\pnindent720\pnhang{\pntxta )}}{\*\pnseclvl5
\pndec\pnstart1\pnindent720\pnhang{\pntxtb (}{\pntxta )}}{\*\pnseclvl6\pnlcltr\pnstart1\pnindent720\pnhang{\pntxtb (}{\pntxta )}}{\*\pnseclvl7\pnlcrm\pnstart1\pnindent720\pnhang{\pntxtb (}{\pntxta )}}{\*\pnseclvl8\pnlcltr\pnstart1\pnindent720\pnhang
{\pntxtb (}{\pntxta )}}{\*\pnseclvl9\pnlcrm\pnstart1\pnindent720\pnhang{\pntxtb (}{\pntxta )}}\pard\plain \f4\lang1038 Sense determines reference
\par \pard Katalin Farkas
\par Central European University, Budapest
\par
\par 1.
\par \pard In his famous paper, "On Sense and Reference" Frege introduces the distinction between the sense and the reference of a name. The reference of a name is a definite object,
and the sense is "wherein the mode of presentation is contained". As to the relation between a sign, its sense and its reference, Frege says that "to the sign there corresponds a definite sense and to that in turn a definite reference". This idea became k
nown in the tradition influenced by Frege as the doctrine that "sense determines reference". The doctrine that sense determines reference has been interpreted in various ways; I shall assume here a simple and specific understanding of determination. S det
ermines R will mean simply that sameness of S implies sameness of R.
\par \pard
Frege extended the sense/reference distinction to sentences as well. In an oft-cited passage of "Sense and reference" Frege first states that a declarative sentence contains a thought, and then inquires whether the thought should be regarded as the sense
or the reference of the sentence. The reference of the sentence should not change if we replace a name in the sentence by another having the same reference. Yet we find that the thought can
change by such an operation: "The morning star is a body illuminated by the Sun" and "The evening star is a body illuminated by the Sun" express different thoughts. The evidence for this is that someone might hold the first thought to be true, the other f
alse. So thoughts can be objects of cognitive attitudes, and one criterion for their difference is this: if T1 and T2 are thoughts, and it is possible for someone to hold conflicting cognitive attitudes towards them (e.g. believe one and not believe the o
ther), then T1 and T2 cannot be the same thought.\'02
Further well known considerations lead Frege to the view that the sense of a declarative sentence is a thought, and the reference of the sentence is a truth-value. The doctrine mentioned earlier - that sens
e determines reference - holds also in the case of thoughts.
\par \pard Frege returns to the question of thoughts in a later paper, "The thought". A thought is regarded as something for which the question of truth can arise.\'02 Frege still holds the determination relat
ion between sense and reference: it's not only that thoughts are true or false, they also determine their truth-value. The other characteristics of thoughts, that they can be objects of cognitive attitudes is also discussed. Towards the end of the paper,
Frege explains how thoughts effect our life: someone grasps a thought, holds it to be true and the thought will influence her actions.
\par \pard Thus there are two features Frege attributes to thoughts: that they should be truth-evaluable (truth-value determining) an
d action-relevant Of course, this double role is not a mere coincidence. If the thought is relevant to our actions through its being grasped and held true, it would be really odd if the same thing would not also be something for which the question of trut
h arises.
\par \pard
\par 2.
\par \pard In contemporary philosophy of mind, mental contents (the successors of Fregean thoughts) are expected to perform the same tasks: determine a truth-value and be explanatory of our actions.
\par \pard \tab There have been, however, a number of objections against the idea that a single notion of content could satisfy both requirements. One problem for any single-notion approach is supposed to be generated by indexical thoughts \endash
thoughts whose truth-value depends on the context of the thinking of the thought. For example if Rudolph Lingens thinks it is raining here, this might cause him to open his umbrella. But it seems that the thought expressed merely as \'93
it is raining here\rdblquote is not sufficient to determine a truth-value: we also need the value of \'93here\rdblquote to b
e filled in by the context. So supposing that Rudolph Lingens is standing on Trafalgar Square while thinking the thought, what is usually regarded as truth-evaluable can also be expressed by saying that it is raining on Trafalgar Square. But believing thi
s does not have the same immediate link to action as believing that it is raining here does. Or put it in another way, it seems that these two thoughts do not satisfy the criterion of difference mentioned above: for it is possible for Rudolph Lingens to b
elieve that it is raining here without believing that it is raining on Trafalgar Square.\'02 Hence truth-evaluable and action-relevant contents are not always the same.
\par \pard
\par 3.
\par \pard Exploiting the phenomenon of indexicality appears in an interesting way in Putnam's argument for semantic externalism - the view that meanings are individuated by facts external to a subject. In "The Meaning of 'Meaning'"\'02
Putnam claims that the following two assumptions are incompatible:
\par \pard (I) \'93that knowing the meaning of a term is just a matter of being in a certain psychological state\rdblquote (i.e. narrow psychological state)
\par (II) \'93that the meaning of a term (in the sense of \rquote intension\rquote ) determines its extension (in the sense that sameness of intension entails sameness of extension)\rdblquote (219)
\par \pard \tab The two assumptions being incompatible, one of them has to be given up (222). Which assumption is to be given up depends on the type of expression we are considering. For indexicals, Putnam claims, \'93
no one has ever suggested the traditional theory that \lquote intension determines extension\rquote \rdblquote (234)\'02. What about the term \'93water\rdblquote ? The basic intuition in the Twin Earth thought experiment is supposed to be that \'93water
\rdblquote refers exclusively to H2O on Earth and exclusively to XYZ on Twin Earth. Water, on Putnam\rquote s analysis, is wh
atever which bears the same-liquid relation to this stuff (pointing to an instance of water), and "this stuff" picks out H2O on Earth and XYZ on Twin Earth. On page 234. of "The Meaning of 'Meaning'" Putnam says: "Our theory can be summarised as saying th
at words like 'water' have an unnoticed indexical component". There are two ways, Putnam goes on, to incorporate the insight that \'93water\rdblquote
has an indexical component. One would be treating it on an exact analogy with other indexicals. On this view, \'93water\rdblquote w
ould have the same meaning but different extension on Earth and Twin Earth; that is, we retain the first assumption and reject the second, and apparently no externalist conclusion follows. The other way to incorporate the indexical insight would be to sti
ck to the doctrine of the second assumption, and say that "difference in extension is ipso facto a difference in intension" (ibid.). This option is chosen by Putnam and it leads straight to the semantic externalist conclusion.
\par \pard
Putnam's original argument was about meanings, but the thesis of externalism assumed its real significance when it was extended to mental contents. Externalism about mental content is the view that the content of (some) of our mental states is individuate
d by facts external to us. Here is a possible argument from the indexicality of \'93water\rdblquote
to content externalism. Suppose that Leo Peter believes that athletes drink four litres of water every day. As I said, content is expected to be truth-evaluable. In order to evaluate the truth of Leo Peter\rquote
s belief, the relevant value provided by the context must be filled in: that is, the content must somehow include a specification of whether athletes drink H2O or XYZ, according to Leo Peter. Now it turns out that truth-evaluable content is different
for Leo Peter and his Twin-Earth counterpart, which means that it cannot be internally individuated.
\par \pard
\par 4.
\par \pard
The idea that content should be truth-evaluable was exploited in a similar fashion in the Rudolph Lingens example. And that story is of course the same as Putnam's: internalism is incompatible with determining reference. As Paul Boghossian puts the moral
of the Twin Earth thought experiment: "either those concepts don't determine what they refer to in some context-independent way (they are not individua
ted in terms of their referents) or they do determine what they refer to so are not individuated individualistically" (my emphasis).\'02
\par \pard We should all agree that the identity of contents must somehow turn on their truth-conditions. Now consider an ordinary indexical like \'93here\rdblquote . We cannot say that \'93here\rdblquote in \'93it is raining here\rdblquote
does not make any contribution to the truth-conditions of the sentence. Of course it does -- replace "here" with "there" and you get a sentence with different truth-conditions. The con
tribution these words make is such that the truth-conditions of the sentence will be context-dependent. The assumption in the externalist argument is that no such thing is allowed for "water", and similarly, no such thing is allowed in the case of mental
contents. This is a basic assumption in all arguments for content externalism:
\par \pard
\par (E) Mental contents have, or are individuated by, context-independent truth-conditions.
\par
\par \pard If we rejected this assumption, then it seems that we would not be forced to adopt exter
nalism even if we accepted the basic intuition of the Twin Earth thought experiment. For then we could insist first, that if water has an indexical component, then it should be treated like an indexical, and hence as having the same meaning on Earth and T
win Earth. No semantic externalist conclusion follows. Second, we could maintain that the content of an Earthling's water thoughts have context-dependent truth-conditions, the same as the context-dependent truth-conditions of the thoughts of her Twin Eart
h counterpart. Since we rejected (E), we do not have supply context-independent truth-conditions. No externalism about mental content.
\par \pard
So what obstructs the development of this line of internalist response is the view that meaning determines reference (in the way understood by Putnam), or in other words, that contents have context-independent truth-conditions. In what follows, I would li
ke to probe this assumption.
\par \pard
\par 5.
\par \pard So what is the origin of the assumption (E)? And what is its justification? When Putnam introduces the idea that intension determines extension, he says: \'93
... it was taken to be obvious that (...) two terms cannot differ in extension and have the same intension. Interestingly, no argument for this impossibility was ever offered.\rdblquote (op. cit. 218
) And Putnam himself doesn't do anything to improve this state of affairs. He speculates that the assumption probably reflects the medieval tradition of holding that a concept was a conjunction of predicates which give necessary and sufficient conditions
for something falling into the term\rquote s extension. Bur surely, this cannot be Putnam\rquote s reason for accepting the doctrine.
\par \pard
It will be natural to look for the origin of the doctrine in Frege's writings. Frege is also well known for the view that an indexical sentence does not, in itself, express a complete thought. Let's then consider one of the passages where he says this.
\par \pard \'85 is the thought changeable or is it timeless? The thought we express by the Pythagorean theorem is surely timeless, eternal, unchangeable.
But are there not thoughts which are true today but false in six months time? The thought, for example, that the tree is covered with green leaves, will surely be false in six months time. No, for it is not the same thought at all. The words 'this tree is
covered with green leaves' are not sufficient by themselves for the utterance, the time of utterance is involved as well. Without the time-indication this gives we have no complete thought, i.e. no thought at all. But this thought, if it is true, is true
not only today or tomorrow but timelessly. ("The Thought" p. 103)
\par \pard
\par \pard
Notice that the putative objection against the unchangeability of a thought was that it may change its truth-value. The only reason to think that the thought expressed by "The tree is covered with green leaves" has changed between now and six months time
is that it has changed its truth-value. Once this objection is cleared away - by claiming that it is not the same thought which has different truth-value - Frege draws the conclusion that tho
ughts are indeed unchangeable. Only the inessential properties of thoughts may change - for example the property of being grasped by me or by someone else.
\par \pard
This shows that according to Frege, thoughts have their truth-value essentially. If two sentences differ in truth-value, they cannot express the same thought. I said above that the claim that thoughts determine their truth-value is an instance of the doct
rine that sense determines reference. This, we can see now, is quite literally true: sense alone determines reference.
\par \pard
\par 6.
\par \pard
The doctrine seems plausible in the case of mathematics and logic. Given that the Pythagorean theorem is true, no false sentence could express the same thought as the Pythagorean theorem does. If Frege had these kinds of examples in mind in the first plac
e, it is easy to understand why he adopted the doctrine. But consider a contingent sentence like \'93The inventor of bifocals was a man\rdblquote . As it happens, the description picks out Benjamin Franklin, who was indeed a man. So the sentence is
true. Now as far as I know, Frege doesn\rquote
t discuss questions arising in connection with alternative possibilities; but such questions are often raised in contemporary philosophy of language or mind. If thoughts have their truth-value essentially, then it
is impossible to express the same thought by a false sentence. Hence in a world where Mrs Franklin and not Mr Franklin invented bifocals, the sentence could not possibly express the same thought.
\par \pard But, contrary to this, it is standard to assume that in a wo
rld where this sentence is false, its meaning would nonetheless be the same. Same holds for the corresponding belief and its content: the belief could be false and have the same content. If this is right, then we cannot say that meaning (or content) alone
determines a truth-value; we also need the state of the world \endash what we might call the circumstances of evaluation \endash
that is, in this case, the fact that the inventor bifocals was a man. (An analogous reasoning holds for the description "the inventor of bi
focals": its meaning alone is not sufficient to determine its extension. We also need the world to make its contribution.) So when we say that sense (or meaning) determines reference, we understand this as relative to some circumstances of evaluations.
\par \pard It seems then that considerations about other possible worlds suggest a departure from the conception that sense alone determines reference.\'02
Alternatively, someone could propose the following reasoning. We do want sense to determine reference (content to det
ermine truth-value), but we see that sense understood as above is not sufficient in itself to determine reference. So we need to introduce another notion of sense or content, one that \endash
for this sentence - determines reference properly. Now compare Herber
t Garner in this world and his counterfactual counterpart who lives in a world where Mrs Franklin invented bifocals. Despite the internal sameness of Herbert Garner and his counterpart, this newly introduced content of their belief that the inventor of bi
focals was a man will be different. Consequently, content is externally individuated.
\par \pard
In the case of true sentences, this newly introduced content is going to be something like a fact (a true sentence). If the content of Herbert Garner's belief is the fact that the inventor of bifocals was a man, then clearly the corresponding belief of He
rbert Garner's counterpart cannot have the same content: for in that world, there is no such fact that the inventor of bifocals was a man. It is somewhat more difficult to s
ay what kind of thing the content is in this case, but this is not surprising: externalism is always biased towards semantic success. Compare a case with indexicals. In the original example about Leo Peter, it was easy to provide the truth-evaluable conte
nt of Leo Peter's belief that it is raining here, for "here" referred to Trafalgar Square in the context. But consider another example. Leo Peter is having a conversation with Gustav Lauben. Leo Peter says: "You are wounded" According to the now familiar
li
ne of reasoning, the truth-evaluable content of this can be expressed as "Gustav Lauben is wounded". But suppose further that in another situation, Leo Peter merely hallucinates that he is talking to Gustav Lauben, and in fact no-one is there. In this cas
e, it will be difficult to state what the truth-evaluable content of "You are wounded" would be, given that "you" refers to nothing. Some externalists may suggest that in such a situation, Leo Peter is in fact not thinking a thought. These externalists pu
nish failure of semantic success with refusing to grant thoughts. But it would be extremely implausible to extend this theory to our newly introduced contents: no-one would want to say that only true thoughts can be thought.\'02
\par \pard
\par 7.
\par \pard I don\rquote t see much sense in introducing these new kinds of contents, and I don\rquote t think anyone would want to argue for externalism in this way. The fact that purely descriptive thoughts\rquote
truth or falsity is partly externally determined (by the way the world is) has never been regard
ed as an argument for externalism proper. So it seems that we can compromise on the idea that reference is determined entirely by something internal without thereby committing ourselves to externalism in any interesting sense.
\par My question is then this: why not pursue the same strategy with indexicals?\'02
The characteristic feature of indexical thoughts is that, besides the circumstances of evaluation, we need further factors to determine their truth-value. Now I don't want to suggest that the distinction betw
een circumstances of evaluation and contextual features should be obliterated; we might need the distinction for various semantic or other purposes\'02. But suppose that someone is going through the following step-by-step reasoning.
\par \pard We start with mathematical or logical statements. It is quite plausible that the thought, whatever we think, whatever we have in mind when grasping a mathematical statement is sufficient in itself to determine a truth-value.\'02
\par \pard Then we consider contingent statements. We recognise th
at the situation here is somewhat different: there is a factor relevant to the determination of truth-value which was not present in the previous case. To put the matter in a much simplified way, we have to make a choice whether this further factor should
belong to the world or to the individual mind. The choice is between these two options: shall we give up the idea that thought alone determines reference, keep thought the same as it was, and trust the external world to supply the missing determination,
OR, shall we pack the further determining factor into the thought. The decision here is almost incontrovertible: circumstances of evaluation belong to the world and not to the mental realm.
\par \pard
Next we consider indexical statements. Here we encounter a further type of truth-value determining factors. I claim that it is up to us to make a choice again: do these factors belong to the individual mind, to what can be characterised as the realm of th
inking - or are they external to it? Suppose that someone had independent reasons to opt for the second alternative: for example that these factors appear to be further detached from what is relevant to our actions.\'02
Then we make the same decision as before. We acknowledge the existence of these newly discovered truth-value determining factors, but we place them in the world rather than in the individual mind. What is wrong with this idea as such? Nothing.
\par \pard Someone could try to justify opting for the other option by citing the doctrine that sense determines reference. To th
is my reply is that we have already given up the idea that sense alone determines reference, without, however, committing ourselves to the view that sense has nothing to do with reference. We just do a bit more of the same.
\par \pard
We started with the idea that thoughts have their truth-value essentially, and we had to abandon this idea. Instead, what is customary to say these days is that thoughts or contents have their truth-conditions essentially. Sometimes people speak as if ins
isting on internalism even in the light of Twin Earth thought experiments would mean giving up the very idea of the truth-conditionality of mental content.\'02
This is surely unfair. As I said above, indexicals do make a contribution to truth-conditions: the sentences "I am wounded" and "
you are wounded" have different truth-conditions. These truth-conditions are context-dependent. But there doesn't seem to be anything inherent in the notion of truth-conditions which would forbid this. Given the central role of the assumption that content
h
as context-independent truth-conditions, one should like to see some weighty arguments supporting it. These arguments would have to uncover an essential difference between circumstances of evaluation and contextual features - the difference which explains
why should we treat the latter, as opposed to the former, as entering to the individuation of mental content. In the absence of such argument we are not forced to accept the assumption.
\par \pard
\par 8.
\par \pard Summing up. It is customary to hold that the moral of the Twin Ear
th thought experiment is that either we accept content externalism, or we give up the very idea of the truth-conditionality of content. I argued that this choice is not forced upon us. We can accept the basic intuition of the Twin Earth thought experiment
, we can hold on to the idea that content is individuated in terms of truth-condition, and it is still open to us to resist the externalist conclusion. I would not want to say that I presented an argument against externalism, in the sense that I have show
n that anything is wrong with externalism. My argument was perhaps not even a positive argument for internalism. All it was meant to do is to remove an impediment from the development of an internalist theory of content.
\par \pard
\par \'02 Evans' Intuitive Criterion of Difference, Varieties of Reference 18ff
\par \pard \'02 \'93Without wishing to give a definition, I call a thought something for which the question of truth arises\rdblquote p. 87 of Gottlob Frege 1918: \'93The Thought\rdblquote in Simon Blackburn & Keith Simmons 1999 (eds.): Truth Oxford Univ
ersity Press
\par \pard \'02 Or so it seems. Some philosophers hold that these beliefs are the same. One thing seems to me clear: whether this is right or wrong, it is a departure from Frege's conception.
\par \'02 Mind, Language and Reality Cambridge University Press 1975. All references to Putnam are to this paper.
\par \pard \'02 This is probably incorrect. Evans' theory of the sense of demonstratives seems to be a case in point. Of course, this simply means that Evans was an externalist not only about natural kind terms, but also about demonstratives.
\par \pard \'02 P. 164 of "What the Externalist Can Know A Priori" Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society XCVII/2 (1997): 161-75
\par \pard \'02 How far this is a departure from Frege, I cannot judge. Since Frege is silent on the question of alternative possibilities, it is difficult to say what would be the most natural extension of his theory to these questions.
\par \pard \'02 The only case where this might be plausible is the case of God, supposing that God would not even entertain false thoughts. In fact, the present suggestio
n is not unlike Leibniz's idea about the complete concept of an individual, which, however, can be thought only by God. Needless to say, my interest here lies in human thinking.
\par \'02
This move would probably go against the Fregean conception. I am not sure how to situate these question with respect to Frege's ideas, since I am interested in questions arising about private psychological matters, which is manifestly different from Fre
ge's acknowledged concerns.
\par \pard \'02 David Kaplan, for example, has argued that to do so would be surely mistaken. See his "Demonstratives" section VII. pp. 507-10 in: J. Almog & J. Perry & H. Wettstein (eds.): Themes from Kaplan. Oxford University Press 1989:
\par \pard \'02
I would like to remind the reader of what I said above in footnote 3 about the "unloaded" nature of the determination relation. "Determined by" should certainly not be read as anything like "depends on". Then it seems that what I say here does not imply
any non-factualism or conventionalism or mind-dependence about mathematics.
\par \pard \'02 This is, of course, a very heavily debated issue, and I cannot enter into the question here.
\par \pard \'02
A sligthly different formulation from the one quoted above in another paper by Boghossian: "The minimal intended significance of the Twin Earth thought experiments may be put like this: Either mental content are not individuated individualistically, or
they are not individuated in terms of their truth-conditions." "The transparency of mental content" Philosophical Perspectives 8 (1994): p.34
\par \pard
\par
\par
\par
\par
\par }
The following section of this message contains a file attachment
prepared for transmission using the Internet MIME message format.
If you are using Pegasus Mail, or any another MIME-compliant system,
you should be able to save it or view it from within your mailer.
If you cannot, please ask your system administrator for assistance.
---- File information -----------
File: mkrlv.doc
Date: 15 Nov 2001, 10:13
Size: 29696 bytes.
Type: MS-Word
Tisztelt Kollegak,
Kaptam egy visszajelzest, hogy a korabban fenti cimekre eljuttatott
korlevel nem volt olvashato. Az ugy fontos, ezert ismet megprobalom
attachment formajaban (Word, Basic MIME).
Udvozlettel,
Molnar Mark
--
Mark Molnar M.D., Ph.D.
Institute for Psychology
Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Budapest, P.O.B. 398.
H-1394 HUNGARY
tel.: (361)-3533244
fax : (361)-2692972
e-mail: molnar(a)cogpsyphy.hu
http://www.cogpsyphy.hu
Department of History and Philosophy of Science
Eotvos University
Budapest, Pazmany P. setany 1/A
PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE SEMINAR
(http://hps.elte.hu/seminar)
________________________________________________
19 November 4:00 PM 6th floor 6.54
(Language: Hungarian)
P e t e r S z e g e d i
Department of History and Philosophy Science
Eotvos University, Budapest
A kvantummechanika stochasztikus interpretaciojanak tortenete
(The History of the Stochastic Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics)
Mar Schrodinger felfedezte, hogy a rola elnevezett egyenlet formailag
hasonlo egyes stochasztikus folyamatokat leiro egyenletekhez, de
felfedezesevel nem kezdett semmi kulonoset. Elsokent Fenyes Imre vette
komolyan az analogiat, aki eloszor egy maig is joforman ismeretlen rovid
angol nyelvu kozlemenyben, majd egy hires nemet nyelvu cikkben dolgozta
ki elkepzeleseit. Az utobbi tanulmanyhoz mar interpretaciot is fuzott,
amely szerint a kvantummechanika nem kulonbozik lenyegesen a klasszikus
fizika
stochasztikus jelensegkoretol, sajatossagai csupan a valoszinusegi
targyalasmod kovetkezmenyei. Fenyes szazad kozepi munkajat nehanyan
azonnal kovettek, de igazan nevezetesse csak Nelson valt a 60-as evek
kozepen, aki a kvantummechanikai jelensegeket tulajdonkeppen egy
"alacsonyabb szinten" levo Brown-mozgasnak tulajdonitotta. Idokozben az
elektrodinamikaban elkezdtek vizsgalni, hogy milyen kovetkezmenyekkel
jar bizonyos fizikai rendszerekre, ha hatarfeltetelul stochasztikus
elektrodinamikai eroket (tereket) teteleznek fel. Az igy kapott
eredmenyek konvergaltak a stochasztikus interpretacion munkalkodok
eredmenyeivel.
Letrejott a stochasztikus elektrodinamika mint a kvantummechanika
lehetseges interpretacioja, sot alternativaja.
Az eloadas a torteneti leiras mellett megprobalja felvazolni az egyes
elmeletek alapjait, fo gondolatait, valamint ezek kovetkezmenyeit is.
The organizer of the seminar: László E. Szabó
--
Laszlo E. Szabo
Department of Theoretical Physics
Department of History and Philosophy of Science
Eotvos University, Budapest
H-1518 Budapest, Pf. 32, Hungary
Phone/Fax: (36-1)372-2924
Home: (36-1) 200-7318
Mobil/SMS: (36) 20-366-1172
http://hps.elte.hu/~leszabo
Kedves Kollegák,
A Pszichológia Online új rovatot indít: a "Képzés" célja, hogy átfogó
katalógust nyújtson az aktuálisan induló továbbképzésekről.
Az új rovat egyelőre a szakmeberek továbbképzéséről ad hírt, de
hamarosan kibővül a nem pszichológusoknak szánt pszichológiai
jellegű képzésekkel is.
Az új rovat címe:
http://www.pszichologia.hu/kepzes/
A képző szervezetek, intézmények hirdetéseiket ingyensen jelentethetik
meg a katalógusban. További információért keressék Berky Tamást a
berky(a)pszichologia.hu email címen.
Department of History and Philosophy of Science
Eotvos University
Budapest, Pazmany P. setany 1/A
PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE SEMINAR
(http://hps.elte.hu/seminar)
________________________________________________
12 November 4:00 PM 6th floor 6.54
(Language: Hungarian)
P a n e l D i s c u s s i o n
Panelists:
Imre Kondor(1)(2)
Tamas Matolcsi(3)
Istvan Nemeti(4)
Laszlo Palla(5)
Miklos Redei(6)
Peter Van(7)
Moderator:
Laszlo E. Szabo(5)(6)
____________
(1) Raiffeisen Bank, Budapest
(2) Physics of Complex Systems, Eotvos University, Budapest
(3) Applied Analysis, Eotvos University, Budapest
(4) A. Renyi Institute of Mathematics, Budapest
(5) Theoretical Physics, Eotvos University, Budapest
(6) History and Philosophy of Science, Eotvos University, Budapest
(7) Chemical Physics, Technical University, Budapest
A fizika es a matematika viszonya
(Relation Between Physics and Mathematics)
"Ugy tunik, a Nagy epitomester matematikus volt", idezi Feynman Jeans
szavait, majd hozzateszi, "A fizikusok ... ha a termeszetrol akarnak
ismereteket szerezni, meltanyolni akarjak annak szepsegeit, akkor
erteniuk
kell azt a nyelvet, amelyen hozzank szol."
Igaz-e, hogy a termeszet egy meghatarozott nyelven szol hozzank? Ha
igen,
honnan tudjuk mi ezt a nyelvet? A termeszettol tanuljuk meg? Ha nem, ha
a
matematikanak van egy belso, ontorvenyu fejlodese, ha a matematika az
emberi szellem termeke, akkor honnan az a parhuzam, hogy a termeszet
ugyanazt a nyelvet beszeli, mint amit mi, tole fuggetlenul, kitalalunk?
Egyaltalan, csupan nyelvrol van itt szo? A matematika szerepe a
fizikaban
nem tobb, mint egy nyelv, amelyen a "termeszet szepseget" elmeseljuk?
Vagy a matematikai strukturak valahol melyen ott ulnek a fizikai
valosagban? Ha nem, akkor csak mi belevetitjuk, belelatjuk ezeket a
strukturakat a fizikai vilagba? Ha ez igy volna, belevetithetnenk
egeszen
mas strukturakat is? s ha igen, ha a termeszet nem kontrollalja azokat a
strukturakat, amiket raaggatunk, akkor a matematikus barmit kitalalhat?
Mi ezeknek a matematikai strukturaknak az ontologiai statusza? Leteznek
ezek? Valahol vannak, az embertol, az emberi gondolkodastol, az
emberiseg
tortenelmetol fuggetlenul? Az a matematikus dolga, hogy ezeket
"felfedezze", vagy az, hogy "megalkossa"? Van ertelme a SETI program
kereteben az "a2+b2=c2" formulat elkuldeni tavoli ertelmes lenyeknek? s
a
Maxwell-egyenleteket?
Egyaltalan, erdekli a fizikust, mikozben a matematikat hasznalja, hogy
milyen valaszokat adunk a matematika alapjait erinto kerdesekre? Van
kulonbseg a fizikus szamara a platonista, az intuicionista vagy a
formalista allaspont kozott?
The organizer of the seminar: László E. Szabó <leszabo(a)hps.elte.hu>
--
Laszlo E. Szabo
Department of Theoretical Physics
Department of History and Philosophy of Science
Eotvos University, Budapest
H-1518 Budapest, Pf. 32, Hungary
Phone/Fax: (36-1)372-2924
Home: (36-1) 200-7318
Mobil/SMS: (36) 20-366-1172
http://hps.elte.hu/~leszabo
Dear Dr. Qwerty,
Below is the abstract of a forthcoming BBS target article
Mental Imagery: In search of a theory
by
Zenon W. Pylyshyn
http://www.bbsonline.org/Preprints/Pylyshyn/Referees/
This article has been accepted for publication in Behavioral and Brain
Sciences (BBS), an international, interdisciplinary journal providing
Open Peer Commentary on important and controversial current research in
the biobehavioral and cognitive sciences.
Commentators must be BBS Associates or nominated by a BBS Associate. To
be considered as a commentator for this article, to suggest other
appropriate commentators, or for information about how to become a BBS
Associate, please reply by EMAIL within three (3) weeks to:
calls(a)bbsonline.org
The Calls are sent to 10,000 BBS Associates, so there is no expectation
(indeed, it would be calamitous) that each recipient should comment
on every occasion! Hence there is no need to reply except if you wish
to comment, or to nominate someone to comment.
If you are not a BBS Associate, please approach a current BBS
Associate (there are currently over 10,000 worldwide) who is familiar
with your work to nominate you. All past BBS authors, referees and
commentators are eligible to become BBS Associates. A full electronic
list of current BBS Associates is available at this location to help
you select a name:
http://www.bbsonline.org/Instructions/assoclist.html
If no current BBS Associate knows your work, please send us your
Curriculum Vitae and BBS will circulate it to appropriate Associates to
ask whether they would be prepared to nominate you. (In the meantime,
your name, address and email address will be entered into our database
as an unaffiliated investigator.)
To help us put together a balanced list of commentators, please give
some indication of the aspects of the topic on which you would bring
your areas of expertise to bear if you were selected as a commentator.
To help you decide whether you would be an appropriate commentator for
this article, an electronic draft is retrievable from the online
BBSPrints Archive, at the URL that follows the abstract below.
_____________________________________________________________
Mental Imagery: In search of a theory
Zenon W. Pylyshyn
Rutgers Center for Cognitive Science
New Brunswick, New Jersey
ABSTRACT: It is generally accepted that there is something special
about reasoning that uses mental images. The question of how it is
special, however, has never been satisfactorily spelled out, despite over
thirty years of research in the post-behaviorist tradition. This article
considers some of the general motivation for the assumption that
entertaining mental images involves inspecting a picture-like object. It
sets out a distinction between phenomena attributable to the nature of
mind, to what is called the cognitive architecture, and ones that are
attributable to tacit knowledge used to simulate what would happen in a
visual situation. With this distinction in mind the paper then considers
in detail the widely held assumption that in some important sense images
are spatially displayed or are depictive, and that examining images uses
the same mechanisms that are deployed in visual perception. I argue that
the assumption of the spatial or depictive nature of images is only
explanatory if taken literally, as a claim about how images are physically
instantiated in the brain, and that the literal view fails for a number of
empirical reasons Ð e.g., because of the cognitive penetrability of the
phenomena cited in its favor. Similarly, while it is arguably the case
that imagery and vision involve some of the same mechanisms, this tells us
very little about the nature of mental imagery and does not support claims
about the pictorial nature of mental images. Finally I consider whether
recent neuroscience evidence clarifies the debate over the nature of
mental images. I claim that when such questions as whether images are
depictive or spatial are formulated more clearly, the evidence does not
provide support for the picture-theory over a symbol structure theory of
mental imagery. Even if all the empirical claims turned out to be true,
the view that many people take them to support, that mental images are
literally spatial, remain incompatible with what is known about how images
function in thought. We are then left with the provisional
counterintuitive conclusion that the available evidence does not support
rejection of what I call the "null hypothesis"; viz., that reasoning with
mental images involves the same form of representation and the same
processes as that of reasoning in general, except that the content or
subject matter of thoughts experienced as images includes information
about how things would look.
http://www.bbsonline.org/Preprints/Pylyshyn/Referees/
___________________________________________________________
Please do not prepare a commentary yet. Just let us know, after having
inspected it, what relevant expertise you feel you would bring to bear
on what aspect of the article. We will then let you know whether it was
possible to include your name on the final formal list of invitees.
_______________________________________________________________________
*** SUPPLEMENTARY ANNOUNCEMENTS ***
(1) The authors of scientific articles are not paid money for their
refereed research papers; they give them away. What they want is to
reach all interested researchers worldwide, so as to maximize the
potential research impact of their findings.
Subscription/Site-License/Pay-Per-View costs are accordingly
access-barriers, and hence impact-barriers for this give-away
research literature.
There is now a way to free the entire refereed journal literature,
for everyone, everywhere, immediately, by mounting interoperable
university eprint archives, and self-archiving all refereed research
papers in them.
Please see: http://www.eprints.orghttp://www.openarchives.org/http://www.dlib.org/dlib/december99/12harnad.html
---------------------------------------------------------------------
(2) All authors in the biobehavioral and cognitive sciences are
strongly encouraged to self-archive all their papers in their own
institution's Eprint Archives or in CogPrints, the Eprint Archive
for the biobehavioral and cognitive sciences:
http://cogprints.soton.ac.uk/
It is extremely simple to self-archive and will make all of our
papers available to all of us everywhere, at no cost to anyone,
forever.
Authors of BBS papers wishing to archive their already published
BBS Target Articles should submit it to BBSPrints Archive.
Information about the archiving of BBS' entire backcatalogue will
be sent to you in the near future. Meantime please see:
http://www.bbsonline.org/help/
and
http://www.bbsonline.org/Instructions/
---------------------------------------------------------------------
(3) Call for Book Nominations for BBS Multiple Book Review
In the past, Behavioral and Brain Sciences (BBS) had only been able
to do 1-2 BBS multiple book treatments per year, because of our
limited annual page quota. BBS's new expanded page quota will make
it possible for us to increase the number of books we treat per
year, so this is an excellent time for BBS Associates and
biobehavioral/cognitive scientists in general to nominate books you
would like to see accorded BBS multiple book review.
(Authors may self-nominate, but books can only be selected on the
basis of multiple nominations.) It would be very helpful if you
indicated in what way a BBS Multiple Book Review of the book(s) you
nominate would be useful to the field (and of course a rich list of
potential reviewers would be the best evidence of its potential
impact!).
*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
Please note: Your email address has been added to our user database for
Calls for Commentators, the reason you received this email. If you do
not wish to receive further Calls, please feel free to change your
mailshot status through your User Login link on the BBSPrints homepage,
useing your username and password above:
http://www.bbsonline.org/
For information about the mailshot, please see the help file at:
http://www.bbsonline.org/help/node5.html#mailshot
*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
Below is the abstract of a forthcoming BBS target article
Mental Imagery: In search of a theory
by
Zenon W. Pylyshyn
http://www.bbsonline.org/Preprints/Pylyshyn/Referees/
This article has been accepted for publication in Behavioral and Brain
Sciences (BBS), an international, interdisciplinary journal providing
Open Peer Commentary on important and controversial current research in
the biobehavioral and cognitive sciences.
Commentators must be BBS Associates or nominated by a BBS Associate. To
be considered as a commentator for this article, to suggest other
appropriate commentators, or for information about how to become a BBS
Associate, please reply by EMAIL within three (3) weeks to:
calls(a)bbsonline.org
The Calls are sent to 10,000 BBS Associates, so there is no expectation
(indeed, it would be calamitous) that each recipient should comment
on every occasion! Hence there is no need to reply except if you wish
to comment, or to nominate someone to comment.
If you are not a BBS Associate, please approach a current BBS
Associate (there are currently over 10,000 worldwide) who is familiar
with your work to nominate you. All past BBS authors, referees and
commentators are eligible to become BBS Associates. A full electronic
list of current BBS Associates is available at this location to help
you select a name:
http://www.bbsonline.org/Instructions/assoclist.html
If no current BBS Associate knows your work, please send us your
Curriculum Vitae and BBS will circulate it to appropriate Associates to
ask whether they would be prepared to nominate you. (In the meantime,
your name, address and email address will be entered into our database
as an unaffiliated investigator.)
To help us put together a balanced list of commentators, please give
some indication of the aspects of the topic on which you would bring
your areas of expertise to bear if you were selected as a commentator.
To help you decide whether you would be an appropriate commentator for
this article, an electronic draft is retrievable from the online
BBSPrints Archive, at the URL that follows the abstract below.
_____________________________________________________________
Mental Imagery: In search of a theory
Zenon W. Pylyshyn
Rutgers Center for Cognitive Science
New Brunswick, New Jersey
ABSTRACT: It is generally accepted that there is something special
about reasoning that uses mental images. The question of how it is
special, however, has never been satisfactorily spelled out, despite over
thirty years of research in the post-behaviorist tradition. This article
considers some of the general motivation for the assumption that
entertaining mental images involves inspecting a picture-like object. It
sets out a distinction between phenomena attributable to the nature of
mind, to what is called the cognitive architecture, and ones that are
attributable to tacit knowledge used to simulate what would happen in a
visual situation. With this distinction in mind the paper then considers
in detail the widely held assumption that in some important sense images
are spatially displayed or are depictive, and that examining images uses
the same mechanisms that are deployed in visual perception. I argue that
the assumption of the spatial or depictive nature of images is only
explanatory if taken literally, as a claim about how images are physically
instantiated in the brain, and that the literal view fails for a number of
empirical reasons Ð e.g., because of the cognitive penetrability of the
phenomena cited in its favor. Similarly, while it is arguably the case
that imagery and vision involve some of the same mechanisms, this tells us
very little about the nature of mental imagery and does not support claims
about the pictorial nature of mental images. Finally I consider whether
recent neuroscience evidence clarifies the debate over the nature of
mental images. I claim that when such questions as whether images are
depictive or spatial are formulated more clearly, the evidence does not
provide support for the picture-theory over a symbol structure theory of
mental imagery. Even if all the empirical claims turned out to be true,
the view that many people take them to support, that mental images are
literally spatial, remain incompatible with what is known about how images
function in thought. We are then left with the provisional
counterintuitive conclusion that the available evidence does not support
rejection of what I call the "null hypothesis"; viz., that reasoning with
mental images involves the same form of representation and the same
processes as that of reasoning in general, except that the content or
subject matter of thoughts experienced as images includes information
about how things would look.
http://www.bbsonline.org/Preprints/Pylyshyn/Referees/
___________________________________________________________
Please do not prepare a commentary yet. Just let us know, after having
inspected it, what relevant expertise you feel you would bring to bear
on what aspect of the article. We will then let you know whether it was
possible to include your name on the final formal list of invitees.
_______________________________________________________________________
*** SUPPLEMENTARY ANNOUNCEMENTS ***
(1) The authors of scientific articles are not paid money for their
refereed research papers; they give them away. What they want is to
reach all interested researchers worldwide, so as to maximize the
potential research impact of their findings.
Subscription/Site-License/Pay-Per-View costs are accordingly
access-barriers, and hence impact-barriers for this give-away
research literature.
There is now a way to free the entire refereed journal literature,
for everyone, everywhere, immediately, by mounting interoperable
university eprint archives, and self-archiving all refereed research
papers in them.
Please see: http://www.eprints.orghttp://www.openarchives.org/http://www.dlib.org/dlib/december99/12harnad.html
---------------------------------------------------------------------
(2) All authors in the biobehavioral and cognitive sciences are
strongly encouraged to self-archive all their papers in their own
institution's Eprint Archives or in CogPrints, the Eprint Archive
for the biobehavioral and cognitive sciences:
http://cogprints.soton.ac.uk/
It is extremely simple to self-archive and will make all of our
papers available to all of us everywhere, at no cost to anyone,
forever.
Authors of BBS papers wishing to archive their already published
BBS Target Articles should submit it to BBSPrints Archive.
Information about the archiving of BBS' entire backcatalogue will
be sent to you in the near future. Meantime please see:
http://www.bbsonline.org/help/
and
http://www.bbsonline.org/Instructions/
---------------------------------------------------------------------
(3) Call for Book Nominations for BBS Multiple Book Review
In the past, Behavioral and Brain Sciences (BBS) had only been able
to do 1-2 BBS multiple book treatments per year, because of our
limited annual page quota. BBS's new expanded page quota will make
it possible for us to increase the number of books we treat per
year, so this is an excellent time for BBS Associates and
biobehavioral/cognitive scientists in general to nominate books you
would like to see accorded BBS multiple book review.
(Authors may self-nominate, but books can only be selected on the
basis of multiple nominations.) It would be very helpful if you
indicated in what way a BBS Multiple Book Review of the book(s) you
nominate would be useful to the field (and of course a rich list of
potential reviewers would be the best evidence of its potential
impact!).
*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
Please note: Your email address has been added to our user database for
Calls for Commentators, the reason you received this email. If you do
not wish to receive further Calls, please feel free to change your
mailshot status through your User Login link on the BBSPrints homepage,
useing your username and password above:
http://www.bbsonline.org/
For information about the mailshot, please see the help file at:
http://www.bbsonline.org/help/node5.html#mailshot
*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*