Metaphysician Undercover
And your reasoning has been repeatedly shown to be in error. — Banno
Banno
Banno argues that Metaphysician Undercover fundamentally misunderstands modal logic and conflates distinct concepts. The core errors are:
**1. Conflating Truth with Necessity**
Meta treats "p is true" as meaning "p cannot be false," but this confuses truth with necessity. Something can be actually true without being necessarily true. For example, it's true you read a post, but it's also possible you might not have read it.
**2. Mixing Metaphysical and Epistemic Modality**
Meta fails to distinguish epistemic possibility (what we know) from metaphysical possibility (what could have been). Using the Jindabyne snow example, after checking weather reports we know epistemically that it didn't snow, but we can still consider metaphysically what would have happened if it had snowed.
**3. Reversing the Actuality-Possibility Relationship**
Meta claims knowing something is actual excludes it being possible, violating 2300 years of logical tradition from Aristotle onward that "what is actual must be possible". If you know something, it's trivially possible to know it—the alternative would mean Meta "knows only things that are impossible to know."
**4. Confusing Semantics with Metaphysics**
Meta conflates semantic stipulations (how we talk about worlds in models) with metaphysical claims (what world we're actually in). Possible worlds are semantic devices for evaluating formulas, not claims about multiple concrete universes.
**5. Misunderstanding Modal Operators**
Meta treats "◊Kp" (it's possible to know p) as meaning "we don't know p," when it simply means "Kp is not impossible"—an error that would render all knowledge impossible. — Claude
frank
Point me to one place where you showed error in my reasoning please. — Metaphysician Undercover
Metaphysician Undercover
Banno argues that Metaphysician Undercover fundamentally misunderstands modal logic and conflates distinct concepts. The core errors are: — Claude
However solid your reasoning may be, you just have to accept the usage of whatever possible world semanticist you're reviewing. They generally say that actuality is a brand of possibility, the intuition being that all events of the actual world are logically possible. — frank
Banno
I did this the other day, but it's easy enough to do it again. A possible world does not consist of stipulations, so much as a complete description of a state of affairs - which statements are true and which are false. In an informal sense it is convenient to think of possible worlds as stipulated, by setting out how, if at all, a possible world differs form the actual world.Possible worlds consist of stipulations.
The actual world does not consist of stipulations.
Therefore the actual world is not a possible world. — Metaphysician Undercover
I will count that as progress. But your views on realism appear similarly confused. But by all means, set out the account clearly and I might address it.we can make the actual world one of the possible worlds — Metaphysician Undercover
frank
As I said to Ludwig V in the prior post, we can make the actual world one of the possible worlds, but this contradicts realism. — Metaphysician Undercover
Anne is working at her desk. While she is directly aware only of her immediate situation — her being seated in front of her computer, the music playing in the background, the sound of her husband's voice on the phone in the next room, and so on — she is quite certain that this situation is only part of a series of increasingly more inclusive, albeit less immediate, situations: the situation in her house as a whole, the one in her neighborhood, the city she lives in, the state, the North American continent, the Earth, the solar system, the galaxy, and so on. On the face of it, anyway, it seems quite reasonable to believe that this series has a limit, that is, that there is a maximally inclusive situation encompassing all others: things, as a whole or, more succinctly, the actual world.
Most of us also believe that things, as a whole, needn't have been just as they are. Rather, things might have been different in countless ways, both trivial and profound. History, from the very beginning, could have unfolded quite other than it did in fact: the matter constituting a distant star might never have organized well enough to give light; species that survived might just as well have died off; battles won might have been lost; children born might never have been conceived and children never conceived might otherwise have been born. In any case, no matter how things had gone they would still have been part of a single, maximally inclusive, all-encompassing situation, a single world. Intuitively, then, the actual world is only one among many possible worlds. — SEP
Metaphysician Undercover
I did this the other day, but it's easy enough to do it again. A possible world does not consist of stipulations, so much as a complete description of a state of affairs - which statements are true and which are false. In an informal sense it is convenient to think of possible worlds as stipulated, by setting out how, if at all, a possible world differs form the actual world.
The actual world can for logical purposes be set out in the same way, as statements setting out what is the case and what isn't. But of course the actual world doesn't consist of such statements, nor of stipulations. — Banno
I will count that as progress. But your views on realism appear similarly confused. But by all means, set out the account clearly and I might address it. — Banno
Take a moment to read through the first two paragraphs of the SEP article on possible worlds: — frank
frank
Metaphysician Undercover
A realist says the actual world contains true statements that are beyond our knowledge. — frank
Outlander
What is a true statement that's beyond our knowledge? — Metaphysician Undercover
Metaphysician Undercover
An important distinction is, much like a child, we assume either we—or someone we know—knows all there is to know (that is to say, can simply be "exposed" to such knowledge, such as walking into a room where it's written and automatically understand it in full depth and detail as others do; this is merely the ego at work, the driving force and cause of all human suffering). — Outlander
frank
Can you clarify this? What is a true statement that's beyond our knowledge? It doesn't make any sense to me. — Metaphysician Undercover
Outlander
Speak for yourself. I don't see why anyone would ever assume that there is someone who knows all there is to know. Since knowledge varies from one person to another, it's very counterintuitive to think that there would be one person who knows everything. Since much knowledge is context dependent wouldn't this require someone who is everywhere, all the time? — Metaphysician Undercover
Since knowledge is the property of knowers, are you proposing God to support the idea of knowledge which is unknowable to current human beings? — Metaphysician Undercover
EricH
If this is supposed to be an argument for p -> ◇p (if p then possibly p), then it does not work. — SophistiCat
Metaphysician Undercover
It makes sense to realists. Apparently you aren't one. — frank
All I was trying to say is, even a child can come across "true knowledge"—he or she simply might be "incapable of knowing (processing it?)" at the time (but might, given enough time, thus illustrating the concept of the unknowable becoming knowable, at least in one valid manner of thinking). — Outlander
Banno
A possible world consists of statements setting out what is the case and what isn't.
The actual world consists of statements setting out what is the case and what isn't.
Every possible world is the actual world. — Metaphysician Undercover
frank
I think I'm realist, that's why I have difficult making "possible worlds" (worlds which are not real), consistent with "the actual world" (a world which is real). — Metaphysician Undercover
As Fitch showed, antirealists know everything that is to be known. There are no true statements outside of what an antirealist knows. Unless they reject classical logic. — Banno
Metaphysician Undercover
Again, a world does not consist of a set of statements. — Banno
Real? They're both abstract objects. :lol: — frank
Banno
What does a possible world consist ofthen? — Metaphysician Undercover
Outlander
Sure, why not? — frank
Metaphysician Undercover
So to reply to your SEP article, human beings think that "things might have been different in countless ways". These different ways that human beings think that things might have been different, are thought up by human beings, and so they are not independent from us. Therefore, "possible worlds" are worlds which are not independent from us, they are dependent on us. If, "the actual world" is said to be one of the possible worlds, then the actual world is not independent from us. Possible worlds are not independent. — Metaphysician Undercover
Care to explain what you're talking about? As far as I'm aware of, only human beings make statements, and only human beings make judgements of true and false. That is why "a true statement that's beyond our knowledge" makes no sense to me. It has nothing to do with whether I'm realist or not, it's a matter of how I understand the terms you are using. You appear to be using these terms in a way which I am not familiar with. Maybe you could define "statement" and "true"? — Metaphysician Undercover
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