I
disagree. We are saying something about the world: namely, Obama is part of it. This is a truth-valuable statement. It is true! **[It is trivially true, but fails to be informative at all] **Contrast: “Blobama exists.” -](False, I presume.)/-] ****** Note also the contrast between “Hamlet exists” and “Blamlet exists.”
How is this an objection to what I already said about the differences between
meaning, reference, and truth in my other posts? I haven’t left anything out here. You assume that you are pointing to objects that exist by your use of these notions (which is totally fine with me). But the meaning that your intentionality associates with the object you presuppose to exist is not the same thing as
THAT the objects
exists. Do you see the difference?
Betterave;6341642:
I forgot to add here that this [Obama exists]
also implies that we are saying something
about Obama **[no it doesn’t; like Kant before me, it is trivially true because it is analytic] **: namely that we can look at the world/reality in order to find out more about him **[that’s not implied in the statement at all any more than that “Hamlet exists” implies that we can go around looking in the world to find out more about Hamlet]. **We are not free to invent statements about him **[of course not] **and regard these statements as ‘non-truth-functional’
[these statements are NON-truth-functional, especially if you’re a Kantian about these matters] The same applies to **[the concept of] **Hamlet.
Suppose we do treat existence like a predicate. Kant (and myself too) would simply say that “Obama exists” is
trivially true because you are predicating existence to an object you are already presupposing to exist. So the statement is completely non-informative about Obama. So it is arguable whether it is asserting or denying anything about Obama at all. In other words, presupposing “Obama” designates an object, uttering “Obama exists” is logically equivalent to uttering with the **exact same **
meaning and intentionality:
“Obama”
So you haven’t **said **anything at all. You’ve just uttered a word, presupposing that thing exists by your utterance of the word. The same is true for “Blobama.” This is precisely the source of the triviality of the statement for which you are trying to give additional sense to, as if “Obama exists” meant anything more than
that he exists. But it
doesn’t mean anything more. The same is true for “Bloma exists.” If you really believed this statement has something to say, it is not saying anything more than the former statement about Obama.
I can see that you continue to confuse meaning with existence as if meaning was intimately tied up with presupposition an entity’s existence.
I am dead serious about this: If you haven’t already, please read Frege’s
Sense and Nominatum where addresses all the difficulties you seem to be having with intentionality, reference, and meaning. He captures it all with one **univocal ** meaning of “existence.” Philosophers were not dense to the accusations you are firing their way.