NotAristotle
The words "necessarily" and "possibly" do not denote extensional sets. — Leontiskos
Banno
The trouble with Tarski's system is that there is but one domain, and one interpretation. Kripke's move was to notice that if we consider multiple domains and interpretations, we can use Tarski's approach to analyse modal statements....a Tarskian interpretation fixes the domain of quantification and the extensions of all the predicates. Pretty clearly, however, to capture necessity and possibility, one must be able to consider alternative “possible” domains of quantification and alternative “possible” extensions for predicates as well. — From Tarskian to Possible World Semantics.
Banno
Metaphysician Undercover
This is purely extensional. Kripke's move:
- Extensionality is preserved *within each world* (Tarski)
- Extensions can differ *across worlds*
- So substitution fails across worlds, not because modal logic is intensional,
but because predicate extensions vary from world to world.
This is exactly what necessity and possibility require. — Banno
NotAristotle
frank
That is contrary to what the SEP article states. Modal logic is intensional. And, it is only the expression of it, the interpretation of separate "possible worlds", which produces extensionality. — Metaphysician Undercover
NotAristotle
predicate extensions vary from world to world. — Banno
NotAristotle
Leontiskos
I reject your definition as completely different from the one in the article we are supposed to be reading, which I quoted above. Taking a definition from a different context is not helpful, only a distraction or a deliberate attempt at equivocation. — Metaphysician Undercover
The words "necessarily" and "possibly" do not denote extensional sets. — Leontiskos
Can you say what you mean by this? — NotAristotle
The idea of possible worlds raised the prospect of extensional respectability for modal logic, not by rendering modal logic itself extensional, but by endowing it with an extensional semantic theory — one whose own logical foundation is that of classical predicate logic and, hence, one on which possibility and necessity can ultimately be understood along classical Tarskian lines. Specifically, in possible world semantics, the modal operators are interpreted as quantifiers over possible worlds... — Menzel, Possible Worlds (SEP)
Metaphysician Undercover
Kripke postulates "rigid designators," I think. So if Nixon is the referent of the term "Nixon" in any given possible world, maybe that alone solves extensionality without having to worry about the existence of "possible worlds." What do you think? — NotAristotle
Could you quote the passage you're referring to here? — frank
I think your EDIT is the proper interpretation. It makes modal logic the subject of an extensional logic. Here's a quote from the referenced supplement at the end of 1.2:
"As noted, possible world semantics does not make modal logic itself extensional; the substitutivity principles all remain invalid for modal languages under (basic) possible worlds semantics. Rather, it is the semantic theory itself — more exactly, the logic in which the theory is expressed — that is extensional." — Metaphysician Undercover
Leontiskos
Could you quote the passage you're referring to here? — frank
Modal logic, therefore, is intensional: in general, the truth value of a sentence is determined by something over and above its form and the extensions of its components. — Menzel, 1.1
the central motivation for possible world semantics was to deliver an extensional semantics for modal languages — Menzel
NotAristotle
Since the properties of the thing named "Nixon" in this case, are different in the different possible worlds — Metaphysician Undercover
frank
Banno
Banno
No, Meta. Let's go through it step by step.That is contrary to what the SEP article states. — Metaphysician Undercover
Banno
Yes.And consequently sentence extensions; that is, truth value, also varies across worlds. — NotAristotle
NotAristotle
Banno
Yep. Modal logic uses the extensional definition of truth as satisfaction within a world. Strictly, it is the interpretation that varies form world to world, as that includes the different individuals. So if we compare w₀, in which we have {Algol, BASIC}, and with w₁ in which we have {Algol, BASIC, COBOL}, the difference in the domain shows itself in a difference in the interpretation of the predicate.His point was that the intensionality of modal logic is irrelevant to the fact that possible world semantics establishes extensionality by predicates having different individuals in their domains depending on the possible world, and that it is this difference that defeats substitutivity for modal logic. At least I think that is correct. — NotAristotle
Banno
NotAristotle
Metaphysician Undercover
The same thing cannot have different properties at different times? — NotAristotle
That gives us extension within worlds, but not across worlds. — frank
1. What “extensional” means hereA logic is extensional when:
To know whether a sentence is true, you only need to know the extensions (the things the predicates apply to). — Banno
So “Algol is John’s pet” is true just because Algol ∈ that set. Nothing else matters. That’s extensionality. — Banno
. Why modal logic is intensionalModal logic contains operators like □ “necessarily” and ◇ “possibly.”
Now the truth of “□φ” does not depend only on what is true in the actual world. It depends on what happens in other worlds (other interpretations).
That is why modal logic is intensional.
We need more information than just the extension in the actual world.
This is exactly what the SEP says. — Banno
By contrast, the intension of an expression is something rather less definite — its sense, or meaning, the semantical aspect of the expression that determines its extension. For purposes here, let us say that a logic is a formal language together with a semantic theory for the language, that is, a theory that provides rigorous definitions of truth, validity, and logical consequence for the language.
...
In an intensional logic, the truth values of some sentences are determined by something over and above their forms and the extensions of their components and, as a consequence, at least one classical substitutivity principle is typically rendered invalid. — SEP
Here is the key point Meta missed:
Even though modal logic is intensional globally, each individual world is fully extensional in the plain Tarskian sense.
Inside any world w
The domain is fixed
Predicate extensions are fixed
Truth is evaluated purely extensionally, just like ordinary first-order logic — Banno
Meta insists that failure of substitution “proves” intensionality between worlds. But that is exactly the point of possible-world semantics: — Banno
Each world has its own extensions. Therefore substituting co-referential terms across worlds need not preserve truth.
That is not a problem — it is the definition of intensionality.
There is no “illusion” here. — Banno
Again, what must you make of the heading "1.2 Extensionality Regained"? — Banno
Banno
is an bit of an over-reach. Even if a logic's semantics uses sets the meaning of natural language does not thereby become extensional. Indeed, we ought keep the intentional aspect of natural languages not found in extensional logics....therefore its ability to translate and track natural reasoning depends on how closely the meaning of any given natural reasoning coheres with set theory. — Leontiskos
Not quite. Menzel states that the semantics is extensional, meaning it is a Tarskian model-theoretic semantics. This does not mean that modal operators are extensional, nor that modal language is reducible to sets, nor that modal reasoning becomes extensional. It simply means the model theory uses standard tools (sets, functions, relations). Logicians are not pretending that modal terms are extensional.The point is clear enough, "Modal logic is not extensional, but modern logicians endow it with an extensional semantic theory." Or as I said earlier, modern logicians pretend that modal terms are extensional because they have a pre-made extensional engine, and that engine can't power non-extensional reasoning. — Leontiskos
Banno
The same thing cannot have different properties at different times? — NotAristotle
NotAristotle
Since the properties of the thing named "Nixon" in this case, are different in the different possible worlds, we cannot say that there is a single referent, — Metaphysician Undercover
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