Abstract
In this paper, I want to address once more the venerable problem of intentional
identity, the problem of how different thoughts can be about the same thing even
if this thing does not exist. First, I will try to show that antirealist approaches to this
problem are doomed to fail. For they ultimately share a problematic assumption, namely
that thinking about something involves identifying it. Second, I will claim that once one
rejects this assumption and holds instead that thoughts are constituted either by what
they are about, their intentional objects, or by what determines their proposition-like
intentional contents, one can address the problem of intentional identity in a different
way. One can indeed provide a new solution to it that basically relies on two factors: a)
what sort of metaphysical nature intentional objects effectively possess, once they are
conceived as schematic objects à la Crane (2001, 2013); b) whether such objects really
belong to the overall ontological inventory of what there is. According to this solution,
two thoughts are about the same nonexistent intentional object iff i) that object satisfies
the identity criterion for objects of that metaphysical kind and ii) objects of that kind
belong to the overall ontological inventory of what there is, independently of whether
they exist (in a suitable first-order sense of existence). As such, this solution is neither
realist nor antirealist: only if condition ii) is satisfied, different thoughts can be about
the same nonexistent intentionale; otherwise, they are simply constituted by the same
intentional content (provided that this content is not equated with that intentionale).
Third, armed with this solution, I will hold that one can find a suitable treatment of the
specific and related problem of whether different people may mock-think about the
same thing, even if there really is no such thing. Finally, I will try to show that this treatment can be also applied to the case in which different thoughts are, according to
phenomenology, about the same intentionale and yet this intentionale is of a kind such that there really are no things of that kind. For in this case, such thoughts are about the same intentionale only fictionally.