If A and B have the same properties, A=B. Show what properties physical possibilities have that logical possibilities don't or vice versa. — Mongrel
So if physical law is necessary, then the set of physical possibilities has the same members as the set of logical possibilities. Is that what you're saying? — Mongrel
You have offered no reason to think that the laws of physics are logically necessary. — Pierre-Normand
So what are we talking about now? — Mongrel
You had issued a challenge for me to show "what properties physical possibilities have that logical possibilities don't or vice versa." I was merely responding to this challenge. It may not be physically possible for you to jump 10 feet high right now, but unless the physical laws that account for you not having this ability can be derived from logical laws, and hence aren't contingent, then it is logically possible that you would do so. — Pierre-Normand
If an electron is a wave, yes. — Mongrel
If physical law is necessary, then the set of all physical possibilities is the same as the set of all logical possibilities. Right? — Mongrel
Drop the issue of entailment. It's irrelevant. All that's required for statements of physical law to be necessarily true is that it's true that the universe couldn't have been any other way.
You haven't given any indication as to why you think the world could not logically have been different than it actually is. — Pierre-Normand
You attempt at demonstrating that physical and logical necessity are co-extensive relies on your using "necessarily" equivocally as if there were just one kind of necessity. This is question begging. Of course if you assume that the world can't logically be any other way than (actual) physical laws dictate it to be, then those two sorts of necessity collapse into one. — Pierre-Normand
The universe could have been some other way. — Mongrel
Only in the case where it could not logically have been any other way than the way it actually is do the concepts of logical and physical necessity collapse into one. — Pierre-Normand
What do you know about the natural history of the universe that no physicist currently does? — Mongrel
In that case, the concepts of logical possibility and physical possibility would be co-extensive. — Pierre-Normand
Maybe a Hesperus/Phosphorus type of difference. — Mongrel
Anyway, for the discerning eye, we just affirmed that the answer to the title of the thread is:
YES.
Not quite the same. The necessity of identity is metaphysical, it is neither logical nor physical. — Pierre-Normand
No, its not a matter of faith since even if one were agnostic regarding the sort of necessity that attaches to physical laws, and even if those laws were deterministic, compatibilists would not be worried about it. Conversely, hard determinists would deem us to be unfree even if the laws of physics were contingent. The impossibility for one not to be constrained by the laws of physics, and/or by the past state of the universe, are irrelevant to the existence of compatibilist free will or to the hard determinist's denial of the existence of free will. — Pierre-Normand
I was talking about intensional vs extensional difference. — Mongrel
The concept of a physical law being valid only if it has the form of a true unrestricted universally quantified statement is questionable. — Pierre-Normand
Reductionists are always sneaky... like Communists and the Devil.It is a concept that sneaks in contentious reductionist assumptions regarding material constitution. — Pierre-Normand
Obviously what happens in a black hole stays in a black hole. We were talking about whether the whole universe could have been different. — Mongrel
Some natural laws of insular ecology apply only to island ecosystems and some natural laws of chemistry apply only to aqueous solutions in thermodynamic equilibrium. — Pierre-Normand
The concept of natural law isn't without its critics. Having to point out when and where a rule applies isn't much of a threat, is it? — Mongrel
It looks to me like you've built an edifice of complete absurdity. — Mongrel
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