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Full Idea
There are no linguistic devices, no idioms (not 'there is', not 'exists') that unequivocally indicate ontological commitment in the vernacular.
Gist of Idea
In the vernacular there is no unequivocal ontological commitment
Source
Jody Azzouni (Deflating Existential Consequence [2004], Intro)
Book Ref
Azzouni,Jody: 'Deflating Existential Consequence' [OUP 2004], p.10
A Reaction
This seems right, since people talk in such ways about soap opera, while understanding the ontological situation perfectly well. Presumably Quine is seeking higher standards than the vernacular, if we are doing science.
12437 | Truth lets us assent to sentences we can't explicitly exhibit [Azzouni] |
12438 | In the vernacular there is no unequivocal ontological commitment [Azzouni] |
12439 | Truth is dispensable, by replacing truth claims with the sentence itself [Azzouni] |
12442 | 'Mickey Mouse is a fictional mouse' is true without a truthmaker [Azzouni] |
12445 | If fictional objects really don't exist, then they aren't abstract objects [Azzouni] |
12441 | We only get ontology from semantics if we have already smuggled it in [Azzouni] |
12440 | If objectual quantifiers ontologically commit, so does the metalanguage for its semantics [Azzouni] |
12446 | Names function the same way, even if there is no object [Azzouni] |
12448 | Things that don't exist don't have any properties [Azzouni] |
12447 | That all existents have causal powers is unknowable; the claim is simply an epistemic one [Azzouni] |
12449 | Modern metaphysics often derives ontology from the logical forms of sentences [Azzouni] |
12450 | The periodic table not only defines the elements, but also excludes other possible elements [Azzouni] |