BLUE VIOLET Stemless herbaceous perennial plant. Native to eastern North America. Self-seeding freely. In gardens can become a weed. FACTS Give out cleistogamous flowers (insect pollinated flowers). Blue Violet mature plant may be 6 inches across and 4 inches high. Leaves are 3 inches long and 3 inches across and vary in color (from yellowish green to dark green). Leaves are oval-ovate to orbicular-cordate in shape. https:// www.youtube.com/wat ch?v=hGz_mjsbywE CULTIVATION Thepreference is partial sun or light shade, and moist to average conditions, although full sun is tolerated if there is sufficient moisture. The soil should be a rich silty loam or clay loam with above average amounts of organic matter. The leaves have a tendency to turn yellowish green when exposed to full sun under dry conditions – this reaction is normal, and is not necessarily a sign of poor health
(Recall "This is a fine red one.") We shall return to this issue in chapter 11.6 Objection 4 A Davidsonian truth definition has a hard time distinguishing expressions that happen to coextend (that is, to apply to exactly the same range of ref- erents) but without being mutually synonymous (Reeves 1974; Blackburn 1984). Consider two single vocabulary items that differ in meaning but that happen to have exactly the same extensions. The standard example of this is the words "renate" and "cordate," meaning respectively "creature with kid- neys" and "creature with a heart."7 A Davidsonian truth theory will not be Truth-Condition Theories: Davidson's program 121 able to distinguish the meaning of a sentence containing "renate" from that of one containing "cordate," for each term will have been assigned just the same class of objects as its extension. First reply In a truth theory of the sort described here, the words used in the right-hand