1 Forthcoming in Gustafsson, M. Kuusela, O. and Macha J. eds. Engaging Kripke With Wittgenstein: The Standard Metre, Contingent Apriori, and Beyond (Routledge). Overlooked Distinctions: the Mirage of Contingent A Priori Oskari Kuusela https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9345-9499 Abstract: In this essay I argue, with reference to Wittgenstein’s discussion of the standard meter in the Philosophical Investigations, that Kripke’s introduction of the epistemological- metaphysical category of contingent a priori in Naming and Necessity fails, due to his overlooking certain important distinctions in the use of relevant expressions and due to his unrecognized or unacknowledged wavering between different uses of relevant sentences. If the argument is correct, the notion of contingent a priori truths that Kripke seeks to introduce is merely a philosophical mirage that arises from bending the use of relevant sentences similarly to how the bending of light waves can create a mirage. I conclude with a discussion of the logical status of definitions, and by outlining an alternative Wittgensteinian account of relevant kinds of definitional sentences in terms of their non-temporal use. The advantage of this account is that it helps to keep track of the distinctions that Kripke overlooks, and that it avoids the problems raised by Donnellan and Salmon for Kripke regarding the notion of knowledge of contingent a priori truths. 1. Wittgenstein and Kripke on the standard meter: some relevant distinctions Ludwig Wittgenstein’s remark on the standard meter, made famous by Saul Kripke, occurs in the Philosophical Investigations in the context of a discussion of the view, held by Russell