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Full Idea
We can define, it would seem, a strong synonymy relation for single words by them being interchangeable salva veritate.
Clarification
'Salva veritate' means truth-preserving
Gist of Idea
Single words are strongly synonymous if their interchange preserves truth
Source
Willard Quine (Philosophy of Logic [1970], Ch.1)
Book Ref
Quine,Willard: 'Philosophy of Logic' [Prentice-Hall 1970], p.8
A Reaction
This is a first step in Quine's rejection of synonymous sentences. He goes on to raise the problem of renate/cordate. Presumably any two word types can have different connotations, and hence not always be interchangeable - in poetry, for example.
9009 | Single words are strongly synonymous if their interchange preserves truth [Quine] |
7317 | 'Renate' and 'cordate' have identical extensions, but are not synonymous [Quine, by Miller,A] |
7319 | If we give up synonymy, we have to give up significance, meaning and sense [Grice/Strawson] |
3090 | There is only similarity in meaning, never sameness in meaning [Harman] |
11967 | Sentences might have the same sense when logically equivalent - or never have the same sense [Kaplan] |
2996 | Mental states may have the same content but different extensions [Fodor] |
20300 | Externalist synonymy is there being a correct link to the same external phenomena [Rey] |
9372 | Could expressions have meaning, without two expressions possibly meaning the same? [Boghossian] |