more on this theme     |     more from this thinker


Single Idea 16873

[filed under theme 19. Language / D. Propositions / 2. Abstract Propositions / a. Propositions as sense ]

Full Idea

A thought is not something subjective, is not the product of any form of mental activity; for the thought that we have in Pythagoras's theorem is the same for everybody.

Gist of Idea

Thoughts are not subjective or psychological, because some thoughts are the same for us all

Source

Gottlob Frege (Logic in Mathematics [1914], p.206)

Book Ref

Frege,Gottlob: 'Posthumous Writings', ed/tr. Hermes/Long/White etc [Blackwell 1979], p.206


A Reaction

When such thoughts are treated as if the have objective (platonic) existence, I become bewildered. I take a thought (or proposition) to be entirely psychological, but that doesn't stop two people from having the same thought.


The 20 ideas from 'Logic in Mathematics'

Frege suggested that mathematics should only accept stipulative definitions [Frege, by Gupta]
Does some mathematical reasoning (such as mathematical induction) not belong to logic? [Frege]
The closest subject to logic is mathematics, which does little apart from drawing inferences [Frege]
If principles are provable, they are theorems; if not, they are axioms [Frege]
'Theorems' are both proved, and used in proofs [Frege]
Tracing inference backwards closes in on a small set of axioms and postulates [Frege]
Logic not only proves things, but also reveals logical relations between them [Frege]
The essence of mathematics is the kernel of primitive truths on which it rests [Frege]
Axioms are truths which cannot be doubted, and for which no proof is needed [Frege]
A truth can be an axiom in one system and not in another [Frege]
To create order in mathematics we need a full system, guided by patterns of inference [Frege]
Thoughts are not subjective or psychological, because some thoughts are the same for us all [Frege]
A thought is the sense expressed by a sentence, and is what we prove [Frege]
The parts of a thought map onto the parts of a sentence [Frege]
We need definitions to cram retrievable sense into a signed receptacle [Frege]
We use signs to mark receptacles for complex senses [Frege]
A 'constructive' (as opposed to 'analytic') definition creates a new sign [Frege]
We must be clear about every premise and every law used in a proof [Frege]
A sign won't gain sense just from being used in sentences with familiar components [Frege]
Every concept must have a sharp boundary; we cannot allow an indeterminate third case [Frege]