Some of the stuff found in modal logic runs contrary to Kant, so will be anathema to Mww, — Banno
Empirical knowledge obtained in a given world cannot translate to empirical knowledge in some possible world without contradicting the conditions for empirical knowledge. — Mww
None of what has been said here is making ontological claims; it is only setting up consistent ways of talking about counterfactuals.The claims in question aren't ontological claims; that's the entire point. They sound or look like ontological claims, but they are not — busycuttingcrap
It's being made of H₂O is essential to water.
— Banno
This is a notion that still mystifies me — Moliere
But on Kripke's account, it is a necessary fact; in any possible world you might specify, water is composed of H₂O; or, if you prefer, you might stipulate a possible world in which the word "water" did not refer to H₂O, but to XYZ, but even in that world water would still be H₂O. It just would not be called water. — Banno
Empirical knowledge obtained in a given world cannot translate to empirical knowledge in some possible world without contradicting the conditions for empirical knowledge. Ever been to a possible world, observed what is already cognized as water, analyzed it to find H2O in it, or not? Unless that happens, knowledge by experience is utterly irrelevant. — Mww
But what is outside of spacetime? Abstract objects like thoughts and numbers. — Art48
Why would we do that? — Mww
And if something is logically possible, then we may also say that "there is a possible world" where that something is true or is the case. — busycuttingcrap
The claims in question aren't ontological claims; that's the entire point. They sound or look like ontological claims, but they are not. So when I say that "there is a possible world such that X", for instance if I say "there is a possible world such that MU is president of the United States of America", I am not making an ontological claim, I am not asserting the existence of anything: the phrase "there is a possible world such that X" is synonymous and interchangeable with the phrase "X is logically possible/self-consistent/non-contradictory". So I'm not asserting that there exists any such world, I'm just saying that the proposition of MU being the president of the USA is logically possible/does not entail a contradiction. — busycuttingcrap
I think you're missing the point/meaning of possible-world semantics, MU. Aside from people like Lewis (who is a realist wrt possible worlds), "existing in a possible world" is (essentially) just a different way of saying that something isn't contradictory, that it does not entail a contradiction. That's it. So saying an individual exists in a possible world is only to say that some particular description, predicate, or state of affairs involving that individual is logically possible- it doesn't involve any contradiction or inconsistency.
So yes, an individual "exists" in numerous, maybe even uncountable, possible worlds, because there are numerous, maybe even uncountable, logically-possible propositions, predicates, etc that we can say of a given individual. — busycuttingcrap
Sure it does: "existing in a possible world" means not entailing a contradiction. And there are numerous claims we can make about a given individual that do not entail contradictions (remember, "there exists a possible world" is synonymous with "does not entail a contradiction"). — busycuttingcrap
And so this suffices to address your concern about "the existence of the individual": as far as modality goes, the existence of an individual in different possible worlds is the same thing as having multiple logically possible/self-consistent propositions or predicates we can assert of that individual. MU "exists" in multiple possible words... because there are multiple propositions or predicates we can assert of MU that do not entail contradictions. — busycuttingcrap
None of what has been said here is making ontological claims; it is only setting up consistent ways of talking about counterfactuals. — Banno
The answer I accept is that they exist outside of spacetime. In particular, mathematical objects exists outside space time — Art48
according to set theory, all logically possible (consistent) collections exist — litewave
For some reason, since that's not a position I actually hold (nor is it likely one Banno holds, either). We're just that diabolical I guess. :roll: — busycuttingcrap
What do I mean by ‘rigid designator’? I mean a term that designates the same object in all possible worlds. — RussellA
In particular, the axiom of regularity precludes certain kinds of sets that otherwise would be consistent to say they exist. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I imagine there's a lot less to do in a merely possible world, for one thing... — busycuttingcrap
It is not true that according to set theory all logically possible (consistent) collections exist. — TonesInDeepFreeze
For example, it is consistent with set theory that there is a set that has cardinality strictly between the cardinality of the naturals and the cardinality of the reals, but it is not a given that it is the consensus of set theorists and philosophers that such a set exists. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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