Vivid designator

In modal logic and the philosophy of language, a vivid designator is a term which is believed to designate the same thing in all possible worlds[1] and nothing else where such an object does not exist in a possible world. It is the analogue, in the sense of believing, of a rigid designator,[2] which is (refers to) the same in all possible worlds, rather than is just believed to be so.

  1. ^ Quine, W.V.O., Quintessence: Intensions Revisited, 2004, pp. 356–357
  2. ^ D. Kaplan, Quantifying In, 1969

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