David Sosa argues that Millians cannot handle the ambiguity of name in belief report cases similar to Paderewski’s.He raises a puzzle against Millians commitment to the Hermeneutic principle-a name having a single re...David Sosa argues that Millians cannot handle the ambiguity of name in belief report cases similar to Paderewski’s.He raises a puzzle against Millians commitment to the Hermeneutic principle-a name having a single referent is sufficient for being logically represented by one constant.In this paper,I devise a dilemma to show that Sosa’s argument fails.Either the ambiguity issue collapses into the problem of the substitution principle against Sosa’s goal,or Millians can use a syntactic tool to disambiguate and resolve the puzzle.The ambiguity issue does not favour Fregeanism over Millianism.展开更多
基金under the support of the China Scholarship Council
文摘David Sosa argues that Millians cannot handle the ambiguity of name in belief report cases similar to Paderewski’s.He raises a puzzle against Millians commitment to the Hermeneutic principle-a name having a single referent is sufficient for being logically represented by one constant.In this paper,I devise a dilemma to show that Sosa’s argument fails.Either the ambiguity issue collapses into the problem of the substitution principle against Sosa’s goal,or Millians can use a syntactic tool to disambiguate and resolve the puzzle.The ambiguity issue does not favour Fregeanism over Millianism.