- Church Frege ontology
The Church-Frege Ontology is anontology , atheory ofexistence . Everything is considered as being in threecategories ,object (referent ,denotation ),name , orconcept (sense ). The ontology was developed byAlonzo Church [ Church, Alonzo. "A Formulation of the Logic of Sense and Denotation." In Structure, Method and Meaning: Essays in Honor of Henry M. Sheffer, edited by P. Henle, H. Kallen and S. Langer, 3- 24. New York: Liberal Arts Press, 1951.] based on ideas ofGottlob Frege [Gottlob Frege. "Über Sinn und Bedeutung" in "Zeitschrift für Philosophie und philosophische Kritik 100": 25-50. Translation: "On Sense and Reference" in Geach and Black (1980).] [Gottlob Frege. "Über Begriff und Gegenstand" in "Vierteljahresschrift für wissenschaftliche Philosophie 16": 192-205. Translation: "Concept and Object" in Geach and Black (1980).] toresolve someparadoxes . The ontology is related to certainmodal logic s.Paradox of the name relationship *Suppose we call all and only the first nine largest bodies from the sun “planets”. Suppose we are in the year 1995. Suppose Mary believes that Pluto is the farthest planet from the sun. Because of Pluto’s irregular orbit, the orbit of Pluto crossed the orbit of Neptune, so that in 1995, the farthest planet from the sun is Neptune. Suppose Mary does not know this fact.
: If x=y and y=z, then substituting z for y, x=z. : (1) “Mary believes that Pluto = ‘the farthest planet from the sun’.”: (2) “Neptune = ‘the farthest planet from the sun’.”: Therefore, substituting Neptune for ‘the farthest planet from the sun’ for Pluto in (1), we get – ::(3) “Mary believes that Pluto = Neptune.”However, Mary does not believe that Pluto is Neptune, a paradox.
Terminology - Object, name, and concept
Propositions, Properties, and Relationships
*An object has properties. A banana has the property of being yellow.
*Aproposition is asentence that is either true of false. A proposition can be considered to be afunction , withobjects in it considered asvariables , and thevalue of the function being eithertruth orfalsity , atruth function . For example, write “x is Yellow” as Y(x), so that Y(x) = Truth, if and only if “x is Yellow” is true, and Y(x) = Falsity if and only if “x is Yellow” is false. For example, Y(banana) = Truth, since a banana is yellow. However, Y(apple) = Falsity, since an apple is red, not yellow.
*Similarly a sentence expressing a relationship between two objects can be considered a truth function of two variables, that is, a relationship between two objects can be considered to be a truth function of two variables. For example, let S(x, y) = “x is smaller than y”. So S(mouse, elephant) = truth, since a mouse is smaller than an elephant, but S(mouse, ant) = Falsity, since a mouse is not smaller than an ant.Object, name, concept
*An object (referent, denotation) has a name, the name of the object. The object has a concept (sense), the concept of the object, associated with the name of the object. A name or concept are themselves objects, and have names, the name of the name of the object, and the name of the concept of the object. Similarly they have concepts as any other object. A name is said to
denote the object for which it the name.Resolution of the paradox of the name relationship using the Frege-Church ontology
Ambiguities in ordinary language lead to confusion
*The English
ordinary language has ambiguities that need to be clarified as We sometimes refer to an object with a word, e.g., a cat. We refer to the name by using scare quotes, the name of the cat, e.g., the word “cat”. There is ambiguity in the language as regards referring to the cat as a concept, and cat as an object.Intensional context
*An expression such as “believes that” is said to introduce an
intensional context . In an intentional context, the names that occur denote the concepts of the objects for the believer. They do not denote the objects themselves.Resolution
“The farthest planet from the sun”, as it appears in proposition (1) is Mary’s concept of “the farthest planet from the sun”, not about the actual farthest planet from the sun as it appears in (2), so the substitution cannot be done. A more rigorous and formal treatment of this is given by Church. [ Church, Alonzo. "A Formulation of the Logic of Sense and Denotation." In Structure, Method and Meaning: Essays in Honor of Henry M. Sheffer, edited by P. Henle, H. Kallen and S. Langer, 3- 24. New York: Liberal Arts Press, 1951.]
References
Links
"Intensional Logic", Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/logic-intensional/]
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