Saul Kripke's Causal Theory of Names
I am writing a book! If you want to know when it is ready (and maybe win a free copy), submit your email on my website: https://www.jeffreykaplan.org/ I won’t spam you or share your email address with anyone. Part 1: • Naming and Necessity by Saul Kripke - Part 1 This is a video lecture in a course on the philosophy of language. It summarizes Saul Kripke's brief and suggestive theory of proper names that he offers as part of his famous 1970 lectures, delivered in January of 1970 at Princeton University, and then published as a book, Naming and Necessity. Kripke presents a causal theory of proper names in lecture 2, after attacking John Searle's Descriptivist theory of proper names. Kripke's basic idea is that a speaker's use of a proper name refers to whomever was dubbed with that name at the earlier end of a causal chain, every link of which consists of a person intending to use a name to refer to whomever other language users in their community were referring to with that name.

The one true philosophical theory of names

Naming and Necessity by Saul Kripke - Part 1

The Presuppositional Method of Apologetics - Apologetics 101 Course - Lesson 3.5

Saul Kripke | Wittgenstein and Kripkenstein

Russell: On Denoting

Bertrand Russell Theory of Descriptions Explained: Logical solution to the Non-Existent Entities!

"Proper Names" by John Searle

Kripke on Proper Names

Bertrand Russell - Theory of Descriptions

P F Strawson and Gareth Evans on Truth (Part 1 of 2)

Kripke on the Descriptive Theory of Names

The Meaning of Meaning

Kripkenstein! (The Rule Following Paradox)

The Most Suppressed Books Explained in 25 Minutes

Harvard Professor Explains The Rules of Writing — Steven Pinker

Why Ancient Humans Went From Black to White?

Gottlob Frege - On Sense and Reference

Why Men and Women Disagree on What’s Attractive

On Language and Logic | Saul Kripke and Timothy Williamson

