Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

Notes to Gottlob Frege

1. Given our discussion at the end of Section 2.2, in which we pointed out that for Frege, the subject and direct object of a sentence are on a logical par, there is an equally good alternative theoretical description of the denotation of the sentence ‘John loves Mary’. That is, we may equally well suppose d[L] maps d[j] to the function ‘John loves ( )’, and refer to this latter function semantically as d[jL]. Then, d[jL] would map d[m] to the truth-value that serves as the denotation of the sentence ‘John loves Mary’, namely, d[jLm]. Logically speaking, this analysis is equivalent to the one in the text, and serves to show how the subject and direct object of the sentence are on a logical par, in contrast to Aristotelian logic.

2. A similar point to that made in footnote 1 applies here. We could, alternatively, suppose s[L] maps s[j] to s[jL], and that this latter function maps s[m] to the sense of the whole sentence, namely, s[jLm].