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Full Idea
There are three possible sources of vagueness: the predicates, the names, and the quantifiers.
Gist of Idea
Vagueness can be in predicates, names or quantifiers
Source
Kit Fine (Vagueness, Truth and Logic [1975], 1)
Book Ref
'Vagueness: a Reader', ed/tr. Keefe,R /Smith,P [MIT 1999], p.121
A Reaction
Presumably a vagueness about the domain of discussion would be a vagueness in the quantifier. This is a helpful preliminary division, in the semantic approach to vagueness.
Related Idea
Idea 21598 Austin revealed many meanings for 'vague': rough, ambiguous, general, incomplete... [Austin,JL, by Williamson]
9768 | Vagueness is semantic, a deficiency of meaning [Fine,K] |
9767 | A vague sentence is only true for all ways of making it completely precise [Fine,K] |
9766 | Study vagueness first by its logic, then by its truth-conditions, and then its metaphysics [Fine,K] |
9769 | Vagueness can be in predicates, names or quantifiers [Fine,K] |
9770 | Logical connectives cease to be truth-functional if vagueness is treated with three values [Fine,K] |
9772 | Meaning is both actual (determining instances) and potential (possibility of greater precision) [Fine,K] |
9771 | Logic holding between indefinite sentences is the core of all language [Fine,K] |
9773 | With the super-truth approach, the classical connectives continue to work [Fine,K] |
9774 | Borderline cases must be under our control, as capable of greater precision [Fine,K] |
9775 | Excluded Middle, and classical logic, may fail for vague predicates [Fine,K] |
9776 | A thing might be vaguely vague, giving us higher-order vagueness [Fine,K] |