So you're claiming that potentials exist as something "independent" basically? — Terrapin Station
So is there a spatial location of your computer in the possible world you mentioned? — Terrapin Station
An analogy that's entirely different than what we're analogizing? — Terrapin Station
In which case you are really in little disagreement with the nominalist: like you, they hold potentials are non-existent. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Remember the problem was supposedly that possibilities had to exist, had to possess the univocal or equivocal sense of an actual state. — TheWillowOfDarkness
but it has a serious consquence for our account of possible worlds: they cannot exist all (since existing things are actual). — TheWillowOfDarkness
I'm not just assuming for no reason that possible worlds can't exist nonmaterially. It's via reasoning that we justify that they can't exist nonmaterially. — Terrapin Station
1.There are possibilities
2. They can’t be grounded nonmaterially in the nonphysical world
3. So they must be an upshot of material facts
4. If they’re upshots of material facts, they can’t exist in the nonphysical world but must exist in the physical world — Terrapin Station
the whole idea of nonphysical existents is incoherent. It's not worth bothering with. — Terrapin Station
1. There are possibilities
2. They can’t be grounded materially in the physical world
3. So they must be abstract objects
4. If they’re abstract objects they can’t exist in the physical world but must exist in a mind or collection of minds
5. To remain possibilities in the absence of contingent minds they must exist within an absolutely necessary mind — AJJ
Your 2 is that one can't describe the way that possibilities are grounded in the physical world, so if that's your justification for 2, that's circular. — Terrapin Station
Of course, then we're just disagreeing on whether different things are logical necessities. You'd say your explanation is; I'd say my explanation is. — Terrapin Station
If abstract objects exist aside from "the divine intellect," and that's what we're talking about re possibilities being abstract objects, is that circular? — Terrapin Station
You wouldn't think that an explanation has to conclude that something can't depend on the present world, would you? — Terrapin Station
If the explanation concludes "being concrete objects is what allows possible worlds to exist, since they CAN depend on the present world for that," why wouldn't that be an explanation just like yours, simply with a different conclusion? — Terrapin Station
So when I say that possibilities are concrete facts, I'm not saying something additional about how they obtain? — Terrapin Station
Possibilities are real--they're the fact(s) that the world isn't strongly/causally deterministic. That doesn't hinge on thought, but it's not abstract, either. — Terrapin Station
How on your terms do those possibilities obtain? — AJJ
But that's what I did. The world could be strongly deterministic. It's not. That's how (non-actual) possible worlds exist. — Terrapin Station
My justification gives an explantion for how the possible world obtains on my terms, i.e. I reason that being a consequence of a metaphysics that's not strongly(/causally) deterministic allows it to exist because on other terms it would not be able to. — Terrapin Station
It seems to me you can condense yours down to this: “There can be possible worlds because there are possible worlds.” — Terrapin Station
What did you do different than I did? — Terrapin Station
As you could probably guess, I don't think that positing real abstracts is either right or reasonable. So should I say you're not offering an explanation? — Terrapin Station
That's just saying what a possibility is on your view. — Terrapin Station
So "positing abstract objects called possible worlds" isn't another way of saying there are possibilities? — Terrapin Station
You'd have to explain why on your view the fact that the world isn't strongly/causally deterministic isn't an explanation for how possibilities obtain. — Terrapin Station
What would be the explanation of rain that wouldn't be identical to the fact(s) that enable(s) rain? — Terrapin Station
I explain possibilities by positing abstract objects called possible worlds, with this world being a manifestation of some of them.
— AJJ
On your view, isn't that the fact that makes possible worlds obtain? If so, how is that an explanation per your criteria? — Terrapin Station