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Single Idea 18918

[filed under theme 19. Language / B. Reference / 2. Denoting ]

Full Idea

In term logic, what a term denotes are the objects having the property it signifies. What a statement denotes is the world, that which has the constitutive property it signifies.

Gist of Idea

Terms denote objects with properties, and statements denote the world with that property

Source

George Engelbretsen (Trees, Terms and Truth [2005], 4)

Book Ref

'The Old New Logic', ed/tr. Oderberg,David S. [MIT 2005], p.43


The 14 ideas from George Engelbretsen

Traditional term logic struggled to express relations [Engelbretsen]
Term logic rests on negated terms or denial, and that propositions are tied pairs [Engelbretsen]
Propositions can be analysed as pairs of terms glued together by predication [Engelbretsen]
Negating a predicate term and denying its unnegated version are quite different [Engelbretsen]
Standard logic only negates sentences, even via negated general terms or predicates [Engelbretsen]
Was logic a branch of mathematics, or mathematics a branch of logic? [Engelbretsen]
Existence and nonexistence are characteristics of the world, not of objects [Engelbretsen]
Facts are not in the world - they are properties of the world [Engelbretsen]
If facts are the truthmakers, they are not in the world [Engelbretsen]
There are no 'falsifying' facts, only an absence of truthmakers [Engelbretsen]
Terms denote objects with properties, and statements denote the world with that property [Engelbretsen]
'Socrates is wise' denotes a sentence; 'that Socrates is wise' denotes a proposition [Engelbretsen]
Individuals are arranged in inclusion categories that match our semantics [Engelbretsen]
Logical syntax is actually close to surface linguistic form [Engelbretsen]