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Full Idea
We construct a sense out of its constituents and introduce an entirely new sign to express this sense. This may be called a 'constructive definition', but we prefer to call it a 'definition' tout court. It contrasts with an 'analytic' definition.
Gist of Idea
A 'constructive' (as opposed to 'analytic') definition creates a new sign
Source
Gottlob Frege (Logic in Mathematics [1914], p.210)
Book Ref
Frege,Gottlob: 'Posthumous Writings', ed/tr. Hermes/Long/White etc [Blackwell 1979], p.210
A Reaction
An analytic definition is evidently a deconstruction of a past constructive definition. Fregean definition is a creative activity.
16094 | You can't define particulars, because accounts have to be generalised [Aristotle] |
12983 | A nominal definition is of the qualities, but the real definition is of the essential inner structure [Leibniz] |
4417 | Only that which has no history is definable [Nietzsche] |
16877 | A 'constructive' (as opposed to 'analytic') definition creates a new sign [Frege] |
14426 | A definition by 'extension' enumerates items, and one by 'intension' gives a defining property [Russell] |
13838 | A decent modern definition should always imply a semantics [Hacking] |
11221 | A definition can be 'extensionally', 'intensionally' or 'sense' adequate [Gupta] |
11224 | Traditional definitions are general identities, which are sentential and reductive [Gupta] |
11226 | Traditional definitions need: same category, mention of the term, and conservativeness and eliminability [Gupta] |
9143 | Implicit definitions must be satisfiable, creative definitions introduce things, contextual definitions build on things [Fine,K, by Cook/Ebert] |
10143 | 'Creative definitions' do not presuppose the existence of the objects defined [Fine,K] |