"Right" has several meanings and can be analysed as several different words: "right.1" means "conservative" (identical to "right.1"), "right.2" means "at the end of a sentence" (identical to "right.2"), "right.3" means "correct" (identical to "right.3") while "right.4" means "left", i.e. opposite to "right.4". Historically they were the same word which acquired metaphorical meanings because certain contingent facts, but now practically we have distinct homonyms and would better specify which is the one we are talking about.
Well, if you asked someone living before parity violation was discovered who can't see you what they meant by “left”, they could have answered, say, “the side where most people have their hearts”, or “the side other than that where most people have the hand they usually use to write”, and those would be true of left on the other planet, too.
They can answer that after parity violation was discovered, even if they could see us, and it would still be true. Those are true sentences about "left" or "left", but not complete descriptions of their meaning. When I ask you what you mean by "bus", you can truthfully answer that it's "a vehicle used for mass transportation of people" and another person can say the same about "train", but that doesn't imply that your "bus" is synonymous to the other person's "train".
Also don't forget to translate (or italicise) other words. "Most people have hearts on the left" is true as well as "most people have hearts on the left", but "most people have hearts on the left" or "most people have hearts on the left" are false. (If "people" is used to denote the populations of both mirror worlds then all given sentences are false.)
And if you gave a Putnamian twin-earther nothing but H2O to drink for a day, they'd still be thirsty (and possibly even worse, depending on the details of Putnam's thought experiment).
Is it really the case? I am not much familiar with Putnam, but I had thought that XYZ was supposed to be indistinguishable from H2O by any accessible means.
..."Right" has several meanings and can be analysed as several different words: "right.1" means "conservative" (identical to "right.1"), "right.2" means "at the end of a sentence" (identical to "right.2"), "right.3" means "correct" (identical to "right.3") while "right.4" means "left", i.e. opposite to "right.4". Historically they were the same word which acquired metaphorical meanings because certain contingent facts, but now pra
Thagard (2012) contains a nicely compact passage on thought experiments: