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Steve Kemple
In “On Sinn and Bedeutung”, Gottlob Frege discusses the relationship between signs and
objects. He argues that real objects (bedeutung) can be understood in terms of the way we
already organize ideas, forming relationships that have the ability to be analyzed in terms of
logic. He uses language as a data set, setting up what can be roughly understood as a
geometry of words and ideas. I will show that his argument is valid, and that it brings
profound elucidation to the way language is used and understood, but will offer one
fundamental disagreement.
Frege begins with assertion that in the case of equality (i.e. a = b), the relation is between
the actual signs (a and b) as opposed to the actual objects to which they are assigned. He
argues that the actual object (bedeutung) to which a symbol (e.g. ‘a’) refers, can be
articulated with a variety of symbolic phrases. Regarding a = a and a = b, which as literal
objects (ink on paper) are essentially equal in terms of identity, “a difference can arise only
if the difference between the signs corresponds to a difference in the mode of presentation
of the thing designated” (26). He illustrates a triangle with three lines (a, b, and c)
connecting its vertices with the opposite midpoint, all three intersecting at the same point.
Frege writes, “So we have different designations for the same point, and these names …
likewise indicate the mode of presentation; and hence the statement contains actual
knowledge” (26). He terms these different but equal statements sinn, or sense.
I would argue, in Frege’s support, that the logic he employed is profound beyond the
confines of his paper. By taking his argument a few steps further, we can see how a sense
of a bedeutung (within a sentence that may or may not contain its own bedeutung) can be
incorporated into a larger context of ideas, much as an article or adjective contributes to the
bedeutung truth-value of a sentence. The scale may be shifted further, to reveal a much
larger (and probably very complex) geometry of ideas. As easily as it was demonstrated by
the initial two-dimension illustration of a triangle, the notion of sinn and bedeutung should
be similarly applied to n dimensions. For example, the notion of metaphorical truths (or
untruths) can be easily deduced from his theorem. In a work of fiction, for instance, there
are occasions when the proper names do not themselves contain a bedeutung, but they
manage to culminate into something generally regarded as profoundly true (chiefly through
employment of sinn). Frege denies this possibility on pages 32 – 33, in the passage
regarding Odysseus, and I put that he does so inaccurately.
In conclusion, Frege’s paper does much to elucidate the way we use language, as well as the
region between symbols and objects. His proposition is not only profound, but also relevant.
His logic piercingly illuminates the way we perceive and communicate, and should be
regarded as something other than ink on paper.