frank
2.1.5 A Brief Assessment of Concretism
Lewis's theory is particularly commendable for its striking originality and ingenuity and for the simple and straightforward answers AW1 and AE1 that it provides to our two questions QW and QE above. Furthermore, because worlds are (plausibly) defined entirely in nonmodal terms, the truth conditions provided by Lewis's translation scheme themselves appear to be free of any implicit modality. Hence, unlike many other popular accounts of possible worlds (notably, the abstractionist accounts discussed in the following section), Lewis's promises to provide a genuine analysis of the modal operators.
Perhaps the biggest — if not the most philosophically sophisticated — challenge to Lewis's theory is “the incredulous stare”, i.e., less colorfully put, the fact that its ontology is wildly at variance with common sense. Lewis faces this objection head on: His theory of worlds, he acknowledges, “does disagree, to an extreme extent, with firm common sense opinion about what there is” (1986, 133). However, Lewis argues that no other theory explains so much so economically. With worlds in one's philosophical toolkit, one is able to provide elegant explanations of a wide variety of metaphysical, semantical, and intentional phenomena. As high as the intuitive cost is, Lewis (135) concludes, the existence of worlds “ought to be accepted as true. The theoretical benefits are worth it.”
Additional discussion of, and objections to, concretism can be found in the supplemental document — ibid
Relativist
Haecceity in itself could not account for transworld identity, because haecceity describes an individual being what it is, in all its uniqueness. Haecceity is the identity of the individual in all of its uniqueness. Therefore each individual would have a unique haecceity, and unique identity in each possible world.
If we say that a thing's haecceity is its essential properties, and this provides for transworld identity, as your referred article seems to imply, then we don't have a thing anymore, no de re, just Platonism, ideas, things said. — Metaphysician Undercover
Metaphysician Undercover
No. As described in the article I had linked to (here again), haecceity is just a bare identity, not decomposible into a set of one or more things or properties. It is essence, but not comparable to other theories of essence, except for contrasting it. — Relativist
As an ontological theory, I think it's ridiculous. It seems to be arrived at by process of elimination: take away each of your non-essential parts and properties, and what's left? I say, nothing. But someone committed to transworld identity say that haecceity is what's left. — Relativist
Relativist
Read literally, what you've written makes no sense. I think what you trying to say that IF there is transworld identity, then an object can have the same identity in 2 different worlds, despite having a different set of properties in each world. I agree that is what transworld identity means.But haecceity then cannot account for transworld identity. Transworld identity must allow that the same thing has different properties at the same time, is different in different worlds — Metaphysician Undercover
As an ontological theory, I think it's ridiculous. It seems to be arrived at by process of elimination: take away each of your non-essential parts and properties, and what's left? I say, nothing. But someone committed to transworld identity say that haecceity is what's left.
— Relativist
The concept of haecceity is the opposite of this though — Metaphysician Undercover
Banno
RussellA
As a science fiction fan, the idea of modal realism doesn't seem all that strange. — frank
His theory of worlds, he acknowledges, “does disagree, to an extreme extent, with firm common sense opinion about what there is” (1986, 133). However, Lewis argues that no other theory explains so much so economically. SEP Possible Worlds
Metaphysician Undercover
So, what's Haecceity?
It's what a thing has that makes it what it is.
So, what is it that a thing has that makes it what it is?
Well, Haecceity, obviously.
And... what's Haecceity...?
And so on. — Banno
Haeccety (if it exists) is a non-qualitative, non-analyzable property. It is the one and only necessary and sufficient property that an identity has. So if haeccetism is true, then all the qualitative properties are superfluous to the identity. In comparing two possible worlds, the object could be qualitatively entirely different between the worlds - but it would be the same object (same identity) as long as the particular haeccety is present. — Relativist
So if haeccetism is true, then all the qualitative properties are superfluous to the identity. In comparing two possible worlds, the object could be qualitatively entirely different between the worlds - but it would be the same object (same identity) as long as the particular haeccety is present. — Relativist
Lewis argues that because the concept of concrete possible worlds explains so much and so economically, this overcomes any common sense objections we may have to it. — RussellA
Questioner
"Thisness", usually.
Seems to me the epitome of philosophical reification. — Banno
RussellA
The problem being that the possible worlds model produces a separation between the possible worlds and the actual ontological world. Then one has to be selected as the real. — Metaphysician Undercover
SEP - Possible Worlds
But, for the concretist, other possible worlds are no different in kind from the actual world
Relativist
The people engaging in the possible world analysis know which object they are referring to: it's a footballer in one world, a cockroach in the other. So "infinite possibility" is the point: possible world analysis of an object has no bounds. Of course, this means there are no ontological cross-world identities. (This doesn't prevent us from entertaining fictional possible worlds).This is a good example of the problem I mentioned above. It's basically the problem of infinite possibility. You say "the object could be qualitatively entirely different between the worlds". Well, so could every object. So there is nothing then to distinguish one object from another, between worlds. We claim there is something, "haecceity", but we can't know it. — Metaphysician Undercover
RussellA
True, although isn't there an extra conundrum with direct realism: that if it's true, then it must be false (by virtue of what we observe about how the senses work). — frank
Banno
Furthermore, because worlds are (plausibly) defined entirely in nonmodal terms, the truth conditions provided by Lewis's translation scheme themselves appear to be free of any implicit modality. Hence, unlike many other popular accounts of possible worlds (notably, the abstractionist accounts discussed in the following section), Lewis's promises to provide a genuine analysis of the modal operators. — ibid
Banno
"The problem of transworld identity" is a result of your misunderstanding. Try to follow this.Very good. But of course, rejecting one proposal does not resolve the problem of transworld identity. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do we have one thing, Nixon, or two things, Nixon and that-which-makes-Nixon-what-he-is-and-not-another-thing?just because something is not concrete, does it follow that it cannot be real? — Questioner
Banno
I don't see that haecceity is needed at all to explain transworld identity. Indeed, i have trouble seeing that there is an issue here. We ask "What if Prince Philip had passed before his mother?" and understand that this is about sentences about Prince Philip and Queen Elisabeth, and we do that without the need for the philosophical baggage of haecceity.But someone committed to transworld identity say that haecceity is what's left. — Relativist
Relativist
Of course, we can entertain any conceivable "what-if?", but entertaining it does not entail that it was truly possible.We ask "What if Prince Philip had passed before his mother?" and understand that this is about sentences about Prince Philip and Queen Elisabeth, and we do that without the need for the philosophical baggage of haecceity. — Banno
Banno
I wonder if you follow this thread from the start....but entertaining it does not entail that it was truly possible. — Relativist
In Kripke's system, and in the example we just gave, Prince Charles is imposed, fixed by the act of rigidly designation, and it's this very supposition that sets out that the Prince Charles in the alternative possible world is exactly the same Prince Charles as is in the actual world.....what is it that makes any object the SAME object — Relativist
Banno
Questioner
Do we have one thing, Nixon, or two things, Nixon and that-which-makes-Nixon-what-he-is-and-not-another-thing?
I'll opt for one thing, not two. — Banno
Relativist
In Kripke's system, and in the example we just gave, Prince Charles is imposed, fixed by the act of rigidly designation, and it's this very supposition that sets out that the Prince Charles in the alternative possible world is exactly the same Prince Charles as is in the actual world. — Banno
Counterparts do not have the same identity as the person being discussed. It's perfectly fine to reference counterparts- individuals with similarities to the one referenced.In Lewis' system, there is an algorithm to decide which person in some other possible world is the counterpart of Prince Charles. — Banno
Which makes it fine for an intellectual exercise, but it does not establish possibilia: that the "possible world" being analyzed is possible.Transworld identity or counterpart theory is not discovered by the model, it is presupposed — Banno
frank
Kripke (Naming and Necessity):
Proper names refer rigidly to the same individual across worlds.
Necessity is primitive and tied to rigid designation.
Modality is not reduced to something non-modal; it is taken as metaphysically basic.
Lewis (Modal Realism / counterpart theory):
Worlds are concrete; individuals do not literally exist in more than one world.
Identity across worlds is determined via counterpart relations.
Modality is reduced to quantification over concrete worlds.
Shared Logic / Semantics
Possible worlds semantics: Both use worlds as the basis for evaluating modal statements.
Quantified modal logic: Both accept first-order quantification over individuals.
Transworld reference: Both presuppose a way to interpret identity or counterparts across worlds.
Truth-at-a-world: Both define modal truth in terms of what holds at particular worlds.
Accessibility relations: Both can accommodate structured relations between worlds (for temporal or metaphysical distinctions).
Formal rigour: Both agree that modal claims can be modelled systematically, independent of metaphysical interpretation. — Banno
Banno
A rigid designator refers to a specific individual in this world[/quote] A rigid designator refers to the very same individual in every world in which it exists. This, pretty much regardless of the properties of that individual. That's the point. Here's the logic common to rigid designators and counterparts. We have in possible world semantics the definition that ☐f(a) if true will be true in all possible worlds. That's the logic. ☐f(a) is true at a world w iff f(a) is true at all worlds accessible from w. Now what, exactly, does "a" represent? The interpretation must supply a rule that tells us how the denotation of “a” at w₀ figures in the evaluation of f(a) at w₁. So we have two interpretations. For Kripke, "a" is a name that refers to the very same individual in every world in which it exists. It rigidly designates that individual, regardless of whatever predicates it might have - regardless of if it satisfies "f" or not. For Lewis, in any possible world w₁ there may be an individual which is maximally similar to "a" is w. That's the individual to which "a" refers in w₁.[code]
Banno
Which do you think is closer to approximating the way we really think about modality? — frank
Relativist
Under my view of individual identity, that is logically impossible.Relativist: A rigid designator refers to a specific individual in this world. '
A rigid designator refers to the very same individual in every world in which it exists. — Banno
Banno
Then I'm afraid you have misunderstood something.Under my view of individual identity, that is logically impossible. — Relativist
Relativist
Banno
You simply assume it's the same. — Relativist
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