Kripke Was Right Even If He Was Wrong: Sherlock Holmes and the Unicorns

IF 0.1 Q3 Arts and Humanities
H. Noonan
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract In the Addenda to Naming and Necessity (1980), Kripke famously argues that it is false that there could have been unicorns, or more properly, that “no counterfactual situation is properly describable as one in which there would have been unicorns.” He adds that he holds similarly that ‘one cannot say of any possible person that he would have been Sherlock Holmes, had he existed.” He notes the “cryptic brevity” of these remarks and refers to a forthcoming work for elaborations—the work being, of course, the John Locke Lectures (2013). Coming as it does at the end of Naming and Necessity, it is natural to read this discussion as drawing out consequences of Kripke’s non-descriptivist picture of proper names and names of natural kinds. In fact, so much is suggested there by Kripke himself. The question thus arises: can the contentious claims quoted from the Addenda be defended independently of Kripke’s rejection of descriptivism? I shall argue that, as appears from the John Locke Lectures, they can be.
克里普克是对的,即使他错了:夏洛克·福尔摩斯和独角兽
在《命名与必然性》(1980)的附录中,克里普克提出了一个著名的观点,即认为可能存在独角兽是错误的,或者更恰当地说,“没有任何反事实的情况可以被恰当地描述为存在独角兽的情况。”他补充说,他同样认为,“没有人会说任何一个可能的人会是夏洛克·福尔摩斯,如果他存在的话。”他注意到这些评论的“隐晦的简洁”,并提到了即将出版的详细阐述——当然,这本书就是《约翰·洛克讲座》(John Locke Lectures, 2013)。在《命名与必然性》的末尾,我们很自然地会把这一讨论解读为克里普克关于专有名称和自然种类名称的非描述主义图景的结果。事实上,克里普克本人在那里提出了很多建议。因此,问题出现了:从附录中引用的有争议的主张是否可以独立于克里普克对描述主义的拒绝而进行辩护?我认为,从约翰·洛克的讲座中可以看出,它们是可以的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Disputatio (Spain)
Disputatio (Spain) Arts and Humanities-Philosophy
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
35 weeks
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