"Study Questions" on Kripke 1. Kripke cites three arguments which are alleged to support the Frege-Russell or "descriptivist" view of how ordinary names work. (One of these he calls the "basic problem"; the other two he calls "subsidiary arguments.") What are these arguments? 2. Kripke describes an amendment to the Frege-Russell view of how names work, according to which names aren't associated with particular descriptive conditions, but rather with a family or cluster of descriptive conditions. How does this amendment work? Why would one want to make this amendment--what problem is it supposed to solve? 3. How does Kripke understand talk of "possible worlds" and of "the same thing" existing in different possible worlds? 4. What does it mean to say that a name is a "rigid designator"? 5. (a) What is the difference between the claim that a description "fixes the reference" of a name, and the claim that the description "gives the meaning" of the name? (b) If a description gives the meaning of the name, is the name a rigid designator or not? How about if the description merely fixes the reference of the name? (c) In Kripke's view, could an account of names which said that descriptions merely fix the reference of names draw support from all of the arguments mentioned in question 1, above? 6. Near the end of Lecture I and at the start of Lecture II, Kripke has some arguments concerning the names "Aristotle" and "Moses." What are these arguments supposed to show? How do the arguments work?