Title: Thought and Language
1Thought and Language
2Intension and Extension
- Intension refers to the general properties of a
word, the qualities possessed in common by all
objects that the term covers. It refers to the
distinguishing traits or features by virtue of
which a word applies to particular things. For
example, all objects called trees must be woody
perennial plants with a long main stem and
branches because that is the intensional meaning
of the word tree. Anything that we call a tree
must have these characteristics or we are using
the word incorrectly. - When we dont know the meaning of a word and look
it up in the dictionary, the intension of the
word is usually listed.
3Intension and Extension II
- The intension of a general term is the set of
attributes shared by all and only those objects
to which the term refers. These attributes
constitute the intensional meaning of the term
they provide the criteria for deciding whether an
object falls within the extension of a term. We
know the meaning of a term in this sense without
knowing all the objects to which it applies.
4Intension and Extension III
- General terms have both an extension and an
intension. The extension of a general term (also
called the denotation of the term) is the
collection of all the objects to which the term
applies. The general term "planet" for example
applies equally to Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and
Earth. These objects, and all others to which the
term may be correctly applied, constitute the
extensional meaning of the term "planet." To say
that all planets have elliptical orbits, is, in
this sense, to assert that Mars has an elliptical
orbit, and Venus has an elliptical orbit, and
Jupiter has an elliptical orbit, and so on.
5Intension and Extension IV
- When attributes are added to the intension of a
term we say that the intension increases. In the
following sequence of terms, the intension of
each is included within the intension of the term
following it person, person that is a
student, person that is an IPFW student,
person that is an IPFW student taking a logic
class. The intension of each is greater than
the intension of those preceding it in the
sequence the terms are arranged in order of
increasing intension. But if we turn to the
extensions of those terms, we find the reverse to
be the case. The extension of person is
greater than that of person that is a student,
and so on, and the terms are arranged in order of
decreasing extension.
6Intension and Extension V
- Some logicians have been led to formulate a law
of inverse variation, asserting that extension
and intension always vary inversely. This is not
always correct. Copi points out that we could
construct a series of terms in order of
increasing intension, where the extension does
not increase but remains the same. Consider this
series living person, living person weighing
less than ten thousand pounds, living person
weighing less than ten thousand pounds and less
than a million years old, and so forth. These
terms are clearly in order of increasing
intension, but the extension of them is the same.
7Intension and Extension VI
- Instead of the law of inverse variation, the
correct law asserts that, if terms are arranged
in order of increasing intension, their
extensions will be in non-increasing order that
is, if the extensions vary, they will vary
inversely with the intensions. - Some extensions, such as mermaids, are empty.
Sometimes, as in the case of mermaid, there are
no real objects to which the word applies.
Nevertheless, we know how to use the word because
of its intensional meaning.
8Intension and Extension VII
- Using our distinction between intension and
extension, fallacious aguments that play upon tha
ambiguity of the term meaning may be exposed.
For example - The word God is not meaningless therefore it
has a meaning. But by definition, the word God
means a being who is all-powerful and supremely
good. Therefore that all-powerful and supremely
good being, God, must exist. - The equivocation is on the words meaning and
meaningless, which refers in one sense to the
intension, and in another sense to the extension,
of the same term. The word God is not
meaningless, and so there is an intension that
has its meaning. But it does not follow from
the fact that a term has an intension that it
denotes any existent thing.
9Extensional Definitions
- A terms extension is the complete list of the
items, cases and so forth to which you could
correctly apply the term. That means that the
denotative definition of a term is the statement
of its extension. If you define extensionally,
then you list everything to which the term
applies. - Since virtually everything we run into can be
seen as an example of many different
classifications, these partial enumerations
(which identify individual by individual) always
seem to be subject to multiple interpretations. - Sometimes this sort of confusion can be minimized
by listing groups of things instead of
individuals. For example, we might define
vertebrate to mean amphibians and birds and
fishes and mammal and reptiles.
10Extensional Definitions II
- A definition by subclass assigns a meaning to a
term by naming subclasses of the class denoted by
the term. Such a definition, too, may be either
partial or complete, depending on whether the
subclass named, when taken together, include all
the members of the class or only some of them.
Some more examples - Tree means pine, oak, maple, and the like.
- Dog means Cocker Spaniel, German Shepard,
Australian Sheepdog and the like. - Fictional work means either a poem, play, a
novel, or a short story. - The first two definitions are partial, the third
is complete.
11Extensional Definitions III
- A special kind of definition by example is the
ostensive or demonstrative definition. Instead of
naming or describing the objects denoted by the
term being defined, an ostensive definition
refers to the examples by means of pointing, or
by some other gesture. Ostensive definitions are
invariably ambiguous, however, because to point
to an object is also to point to a part of it, or
to any of its attributes.
12Extensional Definitions IV
- So an extensional definition is showing some or
all members of a set. The alphabet is
a,b,c,d,e,f,g,h,I,j,k,l,m,n,o,p,q,r,s,t,u,v,w,x,y
,z - An ostensive definition might be
13Extensional Definitions V
- Quasi-ostensive definitions attempt to resolve
this ambiguity by adding a descriptive phrase to
the definiens. But this presupposes a prior
understanding of the descriptive phrase,
defeating the purpose of the ostensive
definition.
14Extensional Definitions VI
- Extensional definitions have serious
shortcomings. First, as noted in the preceding
section, extensional definitions fail to
distinguish between two terms that have the same
denotation (extension) but different intensions. - A classic example is 'the morning star' and 'the
evening star' both of which refer to the same
thing, the planet 'Venus', but the sense of
'morning star' and 'evening star' is not the
same.
15Extensional Definitions VII
- Second, very few terms can have their extensions
completely enumerated, so extensional definitions
must generally be restricted to partial
enumerations. - For example, all natural numbers would be
infinite.
16Extensional Definitions VIII
- Third, any given object has many attributes and
is therefore included in the extension of many
different general terms. So any object listed as
an example of a term in an extensional definition
will also be an example of some other term and
cannot help us distinguish the meanings of those
terms. - Suppose someone we're asked to define "movie
star" and responded like this - Well, there is Tom Cruise, Eddie Murphy, Julia
Roberts and Will Smith. They are all movie
stars, but they are also all humans, all
entertainers, and so forth.
17Intensional Definition
- The word intension may seem strange. If so it
is probably because you are confusing it with its
homonym (same sounding word) intention.
Intention means, roughly, purpose, goal, or,
end intension means the sum total of the
properties shared by all and only things
identified by a specific term. For philosophers,
the term connotation is often used as if it were
synonymous with intension. Some confusion may
occur because connotation is also sometimes
used to mean the total significance of a term.
As we already learned, connotation is sometimes
used to mean the emotive intent alone. To avoid
accidental confusion of terms, they choose to use
intension rather than connotation.
18Intensional Definitions II
- The intension of a term consists of the
attributes shared by all the objects denoted by
the term, and shared only by those objects. To
develop useful intensional definitions, however,
we need to distinguish three senses of intension
subjective, objective, and conventional. - The subjective intension of a general term is the
set of all attributes that a speaker or writer
believes to be possessed by objects denoted by
that term. It is an individual's private
understanding different from individual to
individual and even from time to time for the
same individual. The purpose of definitions,
however, is to reveal the public, not the
private, meanings of words.
19Intensional Definitions III
- The objective intension of a general term is the
total set of characteristics shared by the
objects in the term's extension. But one would
have to be all-knowing to know all the attributes
shared by a set of objects. And some attributes,
although part of the objective intension of a
term, may be obscure and irrelevant to most
people who use the term.
20Intensional Definitions IV
- The conventional intension of a general term
consists of the commonly understood attributes of
the objects it denotes, the conventionally agreed
upon criteria we use in deciding, about any
object, whether it is part of the term's
extension. For the purposes of definition, this
is the most important sense of-and what is
generally meant by- intension.
21Intensional Definitions V
- There are several techniques of intensional
definition, that is, for identifying the
conventional intension of a general term. These
include - Synonymous definition
- Operational definition
- Definition by genus and difference
22Intensional Definitions VI
- A synonymous definition is one in which the
definiens is a single word that connotes the same
attributes as the definiendum. In other words,
the definiens is a synonym of the word being
defined. Examples - Physician means doctor.
- Intention means willful.
- Other examples
- For example, to define honesty we could list
truthfulness, frankness or candor for humorous
we could list funny, comical, or amusing. Of
course, the synonym must be a word that is
understood, otherwise the meaning of the original
word will not be clarified. Thus the
effectiveness of a synonym definition depends on
the readers stock in trade the larger his or
her vocabulary, the more effective the synonym is
likely to be in explaining the meaning of a word.
23Intensional Definitions VII
- In such definitions the word that is presented as
synonymous should be as close as possible in
meaning to the word that we are trying to define.
No two words will have identical meanings, of
course, otherwise they would be the same word and
one would drop out of the language as
superfluous.
24Intensional Definitions VIII
- Thesauruses specialize in listing synonyms, and
there are dictionaries of antonyms, words with
opposite meanings, as well. Any words listed as
synonymous would have roughly the same meaning,
and they will range from close approximations to
words with fairly remote connections. - For example, if we are looking for synonyms for
dog we might find listed pooch and mutt.
Likewise, synonym definitions for female,
depending on the context might include woman,
lady, dame , chick, and so forth. From
the array of choices we must select the synonym
that best expresses what we wish to convey,
because the intension, extension, and emotive
meaning may be different.
25Intensional Definitions IX
- An operational definition assigns a meaning to a
word by specifying certain experimental
procedures that determine whether or not the word
applies to a certain thing. Examples - A potential difference exists between two
conductors if and only if a voltmeter shows a
reading when connected to the two conductors. - A psychologist who wanted to study the effect of
hunger on some aspect of behavior would need a
consistent definition of the term "hunger" that
would be meaningful to other researchers who
might want to replicate her results. She might
then define "hunger" operationally in terms of
the length of time her subjects had been deprived
of food.
26Intensional Definitions X
- Definition by genus and difference - A type of
intensional definition of a term that first
identifies the larger class ("genus") of which
the definiendum is a species or subclass, and
then identifies the attribute ("difference") that
distinguishes the members of that species from
members of all other species in that genus.
27Intensional Definitions XI
- Examples
- A house is a building (genus) in which people
live (difference). A mansion is a house (genus)
that is large and imposing (difference). A hovel
is a house (genus) that is small and wretched
(difference). - Note that in the first example "house" is a
species relative to the genus "building." In the
second and third examples, "house" is a genus
relative to the species "mansion" and "hovel."
28Intensional Definitions XIII
Species Difference Genus
Husband means married man
Skyscraper means very tall building
ice means frozen water
29Connotation
- Connotation refers to the emotional associations
surrounding a word, its overtones or colorations
that affect our feelings and attitudes. - The explicit meaning of a word is one thing the
way it resonates within us is quite another, and
that is connotation. - In shaping attitudes the choice of words matter a
great deal because of their connotative
dimension. Bertrand Russell recognized this when
he declined firm as I am firm, you are
obstinate, he is stubborn (and they are
pigheaded).
30Euphemisms and Dysphemisms
- Euphemisms are words with favorable or agreeable
connotations, from the Greek eu-, good, and
pheme, speech. - A government is likely to pay a price for
initiating a revenue enhancement, but voters
will be even quicker to respond to a tax hike. - The opposite of a euphemism is a dysphemism.
Dysphemisms are used to produce a negative effect
on a listeners or readers attitude toward
something or to tone down the positive
associations it may have. - Isnt the real reason the House of
Representatives wont render an impartial finding
in any impeachment hearings that it has become a
snake pit war room? - Snake pit and war roomare dysphemisms.
31- Moore and Parker Once youre familiar with the
ways slanting devices are used to try and
influence us, you may be tempted to dismiss a
claim or argument just because it contains
strongly slanted language. But true claims as
well as false ones, good reasoning as well as
bad, can be couched in such language. Remember
that the slanting itself gives us no reason to
accept a position on an issue that doesnt mean
that there are no such reasons.
32Connotations Revisited
- Select the word with the appropriate connotation
to fill the blanks in this sentence - (Divorced, unmarried) man ________ (past his
prime, in his golden years) seeks relationship
with a _______ (mature, over the hill) woman who
is sensitive and __________ (independent,
wealthy).
33Vagueness
- Vague words or expressions lack clarity and
distinctness, so that we dont know whether they
apply in a given case. The limits of their
application are fuzzy, and we are uncertain about
what they include and exclude. Almost all words
are vague to some extent, and in most cases this
does not interfere with their meaning. Language
is labeled vague only when it is unnecessarily
imprecise, when the intension does not allow us
to identify the extension. Then we criticize
usage and vagueness becomes a charge. - For example, suppose we ask a used car
salesperson how much a car costs and we are told
its a bargain, a very good deal, less expensive
than we might think, priced to move, sure to save
us money, and so forth. Because the car
salesperson is not giving us a price, he or she
is probably trying to make us think that that the
car is cheaper than it really is the vagueness
is deliberate and meant to trick us.
34Vagueness II
- On the other hand, the question How much do you
love me? cannot be answered in numbers. Replies
such as as much as you deserve or not wisely
but too well are perfectly appropriate. - If we want to measure how happy a person is, we
are demanding what Aristotle called greater
exactitude than the subject matter will allow. - Vagueness is not always negative.
- You must not know too much, or be too precise or
scientific about birds and trees and flowers and
watercraft a certain free margin, and even
vagueness perhaps ignorance, credulity helps
your enjoyment of these things. Walt Whitman
35Vagueness III
- In some contexts, of course, it becomes extremely
important to reduce the vagueness of words as
much as possible. If food stamps are offered to
the poor, defining who exactly is poor can make
a significant difference in peoples lives.
36Ambiguity
- In ambiguity a word contains several meanings,
and we are uncertain which one is meant. We are
confused about the word, phrase, sentence, or
passage because it can be understood in more than
one sense. - One traditional distinction that is made among
types of ambiguity is between semantic and
syntactic forms. Semantic ambiguity has to do
with the multiple meanings of a word as it
appears in a sentence, either once or twice. To
take a couple of light examples, Our druggists
dispense with accuracy Bikinis now sold for a
ridiculous figure.
37Ambiguity II
- Semantic ambiguity can be more serious, though.
The Second Amendment to the Constitution states,
a well-regulated militia being necessary to the
security of a free state, the right of the people
to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.
Does this mean that only militia such as the
National Guard are allowed to have arms, or that
every citizen has the right to own a gun ( and
all gun control laws are unconstitutional)?
Serious debate has occurred as different people
interpret the Second Amendment in different ways.
38Syntactic Ambiguity
- Syntactic ambiguity occurs when the grammatical
arrangement of words makes the meaning of a
sentence unclear. The meaning of each word may
be clear, but we cannot understand the overall
sense. Here are a few examples - Eat here and get gas.
- Save soap and waste paper (a World War II
slogan). - If you think are waitresses are rude, you should
see our manager.
39Semantic Ambiguity and accent
- Under the broad category of semantic ambiguity
the phenomenon of accent should be mentioned.
Here ambiguity occurs because it is unclear which
word in a sentence is being accented or
emphasized. - A defense lawyer once asked a coroner, How many
autopsies have you performed on dead bodies? He
replied, All of my autopsies were on dead
bodies. The attorney wanted to know the number
of autopsies that had been performed, and the
coroner assumed that he was asking whether all of
his autopsies had been done on corpses. The
misunderstanding occurred because different parts
of the question were stressed.