How does one 'know' epistemically when an accessibility relation obtains or is successful or not? I am mainly interested in that regards. — Wallows
I don't understand what you're saying hers. How does an accessibility relation obtain (that is, become actual in the real world)? — MindForged
That's not an accessibility relation obtaining — MindForged
But, what I'm grappling with may be more succinctly described as to how does quantification work for other possible worlds? — Wallows
No, a frame is just a set of worlds that share some relevant feature(s). — MindForged
An accessibility relation tells you which worlds can quantify over which other worlds in some particular frame. — MindForged
Your whole lotto thing is a perfect example, you're constraining your modal discourse to worlds where the lotto exists, you exist and in which you play the lotto. That's a frame. You can quantify over other worlds, I'm not sure what the problem is. — MindForged
The same. An accessibility relation is a feature of a modal logic, not of reality (controversial, depending on how you think reality and logic relate). — MindForged
Here I go repeating myself; but, that can only depend on one world from within a stipulation of another possible world can be made. — Wallows
Yes, but I don't understand how you can quantify modal relations. Sure, I can set up a frame of reference wrt. to this world relative to another world where something might have happened otherwise than in this one; but, that's the limit of what I can do. I can't say that something happened if I did nothing in this world that would conditionally restrain another world where the event could have happened otherwise. — Wallows
Each of the modal logic axioms we have discussed corresponds to a condition on frames in the same way. The relationship between conditions on frames and corresponding axioms is one of the central topics in the study of modal logics. Once an interpretation of the intensional operator □ has been decided on, the appropriate conditions on R can be determined to fix the corresponding notion of validity. This, in turn, allows us to select the right set of axioms for that logic.
Ok, so this touches the crux of the issue. Basically, I understand logic to be pluralistic not unitary, so predicate logic might converge with modal logic; but, not absolutely. What do you think? The case I'm making is in regards to when do they converge or don't in this thread. — Wallows
Are you talking about frame conditions? (E.g. the properties of what worlds access others?) — MindForged
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.