Christoffer
SophistiCat
H'm. Did he, by any chance, suggest a better term? — Ludwig V
Ludwig V
Either would be much better. The possible worlds model seems far too elaborate to me and quite implausible as a description of what's going on.Yes, Kripke suggested "possible states (or histories) of the world" or "possible situations." — SophistiCat
Well, completeness is unobtainable, IMO. So why not settle for something we can do?A model does not aspire to completeness - only to pragmatic relevance. — SophistiCat
I've often wondered how possibilities and probabilities fit together. No-one seems to be interested. But here's an analysis of the possibilities of a dice game when we already have an analysis of the same game in terms of probabilities.One shortcoming of modal logic is that it has nothing to say about probabilities. — SophistiCat
Quite so. But can't we just lump all these together as "no throws", which is what would happen in real life. Not that we can ever know all the possible outlandish outcomes that might possibly occur.But what if the die throw never occurs? Or a die is lost? Or it balances on its corner instead of landing on a side? And what of all the "extraneous" possibilities - the weather conditions, the configurations of air molecules in the room, the possible ways the Battle of Waterloo could have played out, the possible alternative endings to the Game of Thrones series? — SophistiCat
Banno
Good. Following your analogy, one of the books in your encyclopaedia is about the actual world. You might take it out and read it. In another possible world, another possible you can take out a different book about their world, treating it as their actual world, and read, it perhaps with as much satisfaction as you derive from reading yours.It all seems perfectly clear. — Ludwig V
Banno
Banno
If you continue to insist that you can use the same term to refer to different things, within the same argument (to equivocate), and to insist that there is no logical inconsistency in doing this, and also assert that the person who points out this equivocation to you, is the one making the error, then I think there is not much point in proceeding. — Metaphysician Undercover
Banno
Yes, indeed. I'll stand by what I said in my first post:This got complicated. — Tom Storm
How do we know there isn’t anything beyond our reality?
Because reality is what there is.
To posit something "beyond reality" is to posit more of what there is. It is to extend reality.
This is why the extent of our language is the extent of our world.
Hopefully, replacing "limit" with "extent" will head off some of the misplaced criticism of that phrase.
The other mistake here is to equate what we experience with what is real, and so to conflate "How do we know there isn’t anything beyond our experience" with "How do we know there isn’t anything beyond our reality".
"Beyond reality" is not a region; it is a grammatical error. — Banno
Metaphysician Undercover
I may have misunderstood, but I think the idea is that the actual world is regarded as a possible world, which does not imply that there are two worlds here. — Ludwig V
We're getting sucked in to all-or-nothing positions. Ordinary language sometimes misleads and sometimes doesn't. One of the tasks for philosophy is to sort out the misleading bits and those that are not. I notice, however, that many major issues in philosophy are precisely based on misleading features of ordinary language - such as the pursuit of "Reality" and "Existence".
I don't think of language as a sort of bolt-on extra that human beings possess and other creatures don't (on the whole). In the first place, many animals have communication systems that are recognizably language-like and look very like precursors of language. In the second place, language is something that humans developed under evolutionary pressure, and hence no different from any other feature developed in the same way by other creatures. In the third place, you seem to think that our "inner intuitions" are not as liable to mislead us as language is; I see no ground for supposing that. — Ludwig V
Metaphysician Undercover
There is no such equivocation. The problem is your inability to differentiate between a model-theoretic object and a metaphysical one. — Banno
Banno
You, in the very same argument use "the actual world" to refer to a model-theoretic object, and also to a metaphysical object. — Metaphysician Undercover
Tom Storm
How do we know there isn’t anything beyond our reality?
Because reality is what there is.
To posit something "beyond reality" is to posit more of what there is. It is to extend reality.
This is why the extent of our language is the extent of our world. — Banno
Banno
Metaphysician Undercover
Where?
Might be best to quote me. Be precise. — Banno
Look:
We are in the actual world.
— Banno
We are stipulating that that one world is the actual world, not deducing it. Any world can counted as w₀. It's built in, not contradictory. There is no modal difference between the actual world and other possible worlds.
— Banno — Metaphysician Undercover
Questioner
the fact we only experience reality in the way we do is not evidence there’s something more beyond our reality. — Christoffer
Metaphysician Undercover
Banno
We are in the actual world.We are in the actual world. — Metaphysician Undercover
The whole quote makes it clear I am talking metaphysically. See the word "Metaphysics" in the very next sentence? It's kinda a giveaway.We are in the actual world. Metaphysics. — Banno
See how it refers to w₀, and so is clearly modal.We are stipulating that that one world is the actual world, not deducing it. Any world can counted as w₀. It's built in, not contradictory. — Banno
And yet the evidence you provide is from two quite different posts, which in context make it clear that one is about metaphysics and the other about modality....in the very same argument use "the actual world" to refer to a model-theoretic object, and also to a metaphysical object. — Metaphysician Undercover
Always. Let's start by having you demonstrate that you understand the paradox by setting it out.are you ready to address the so-called Fitch's paradox — Metaphysician Undercover
Banno
Tom Storm
Is it not the case that what we call reality today is "beyond" what we called reality 500 years ago? — Tom Storm
Banno
If the question asks is there a possibility that there is an aspect of reality beyond our known reality, how could we rule this out? — Tom Storm
Metaphysician Undercover
And yet the evidence you provide is from two quite different posts, which in context make it clear that one is about metaphysics and the other about modality. — Banno
Let's start by having you demonstrate that you understand the paradox by setting it out. — Banno
Tom Storm
But is there something here, some other understanding of "an aspect of reality beyond our known reality" that I'm missing?
if not, then this appears to be a classic case of language leading us astray. — Banno
Christoffer
No, but it is also not evidence that what we experience is all there is. We evolved as these creatures with a finite set of senses. Our reality consists only of what we can detect. Doesn't follow that that is all there is. — Questioner
Banno
At some times you used "actual world" to talk about the metaphysical world, at other times you used "actual world" to refer to a modal world. — Metaphysician Undercover
Ok, then can you at least explain why Fitch and others think it a paradox? Why is it worthy of it's own article, in the Stanford Encyclopaedia, in Wikipedia, in Oxford Academic, and so on. What is it that the folk who wrote this stuff think is happening?I don't understand the paradox as a paradox. — Metaphysician Undercover
No. If you would proceed, set it out for us. I've set it out multiple times, and you disagree with it each time. Your turn. Set it out for us, and how it goes astray.So I suggest that you present it in a way which appears to make sense to you, — Metaphysician Undercover
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