speaking of worlds as simply "possible" allows one to confuse logical, physical and ontological possibility. — Dfpolis
What makes it the case that one thing in one possible world and one thing in another possible world are the same thing? — Michael
Let’s say that I’m the eldest of two brothers in the actual world and that there’s a possible world where my parents have two daughters and a possible world where my parents have two sons. Which child, if either, am I in each world? Is it simply a matter of stipulation?
Do we simply say that I’m one or the other (or neither)?
Perhaps in the first possible world it’s me and my brother if we were female? Perhaps in the fourth possible world it’s two different children who happen to look and behave like my brother and I do in the actual world?
Your puzzle stems from the question: what it is that distinguish a possible world where a son is born to your parents that looks and behaves just like you, but isn't you, from a world in which this son is you? Those two scenarios are indeed metaphysically distinct and, what distinguished them precisely, are our ordinary criteria of identity of persons as they are meant to apply in the actual world. It's possible, though, that our criteria of identity of persons aren't fine grained enough to determine whether or not your would have been the same person if the sperm and ovum that your are issued from had combined at a different time, or if the sperm has been a different different one that accidentally shared the very same sequence of nucleotides, etc. That just means that our ordinary concept of a person, and its associated criteria of identity, isn't meant to deal with such unlikely possibilities since there is little pragmatic point in dealing with them. — Pierre-Normand
What makes it the case that one thing in one possible world and one thing in another possible world are the same thing? — Michael
It's the exact same sort of thing that makes it the case that "A" and "B" are numerically the same in the actual world: criteria of identity and individuation. Those criteria vary as a function of the sorts of things that are at issue. Planets, persons, sports teams, cell lineages, ocean waves, etc., have different principles of individuation. Sometimes those principles mainly are matters of social convention but they can also be, in part, objects of scientific inquiry. — Pierre-Normand
That's not what I said. I said that perception is not identical to reality, which is what you said. — MindForged
We don't even have direct access to our own world, so are we able to learn anything about the actual world? — MindForged
A consistent "set of facts" is one way of articulating what a possible world is so I don't even know what you think you're arguing against at this point. — MindForged
Naturally "reliable" is doing all the work here, being used to obfuscate the fact that there's no guarantee that perception maps to reality such that we can have an infallible means by which to say some experience is reliable. It's like you've never considered any objection to your views ever. — MindForged
Necessity is indeed defined as truth in all possible world [of the set of world being quantified over], and yes X being necessary entails that it's negation is not possible. Where is the circularity? — MindForged
it's nonsense to say that "Venus" names the same object in every possible world because Venus does not exist in every possible world. — Dfpolis
This is exactly what I was talking about, you don't understand this topic. — MindForged
But that's not how proper names work, they pick out a specific object in the actual world, and the meaning of that name is fixed in modal logic — MindForged
Obviously "Hesperus=Phosporus" isn't true in the possible worlds where the references to the terms do not exist. — MindForged
This is all consistent with Kripke's claim that proper names function as rigid designators, and also with his claim that statements of identity of the form "A is B", where "A" and "B" are proper names, are metaphysically necessary. — Pierre-Normand
speaking of worlds as simply "possible" allows one to confuse logical, physical and ontological possibility. — Dfpolis
...distinctions whose advocates can't specify what they mean by them — Michael Ossipoff
"P is possible with respect to a set of facts, S, if P does not contradict the propositions expressing S." — Dfpolis
A "Venus" in another (possible) world is not our Venus. Therefore, one can only be call both "Venus" by equivocation or by universal predication. — Dfpolis
What makes it the case that one thing in one possible world and one thing in another possible world are the same thing? — Michael
Then perhaps if we use a simpler example of an inanimate object. In another possible world the Taj Mahal was built using different materials, or at a different location, or with a different architecture. Does that make sense? Is it just a matter of stipulation that we consider them the same thing (or different things) in each possible world? — Michael
You believe in an un-acknowledged and unsupported assumption that the physical world that we live in is the "actual", "existent", "physical" and "real" one, in some (unspecified) sense in which the infinitely-many other possibility-worlds aren't. — Michael Ossipoff
there's no reasons to claim that they're "real" or "existent", whatever that would mean. — Michael Ossipoff
There's no reason to believe that your experience is other than such an abstract logical system. — Michael Ossipoff
If you claim that this physical world is more than the setting for the hypothetical logical system that is your experience-story, then in what respect to you think that this physical world is more than that. — Michael Ossipoff
Do you believe in unparsimonious brute-facts and unverfiable, unfalsifiable propositions? — Michael Ossipoff
Which child, if either, am I in each world? Is it simply a matter of stipulation? Do we simply say that I’m one or the other (or neither)? — Michael
It depends on how you define "same". Lewis's suggestion was that "same" doesn't meaningfully apply to someone or something in a different possibility world, It's a different world, necessarily with different (even if identical) things. — Michael Ossipoff
This seems an attempt to give possible worlds the same epistemological status as the real world, hence my justification of direct epistemic access. — Dfpolis
Facts are actual, not merely possible. Possible worlds might be a consistent set of posits, they are not a consistent set of facts.
Yes, I used "possible" -- not essentially, but to avoid circumlocution. So, here's the same definition restated: "P is possible with respect to a set of facts, S, if P does not contradict the propositions expressing S."
If I didn't consider objections, I wouldn't have said "reliable." Yes, it's doing a lot of work, but that doesn't mean that we can't have true knowledge, where "truth" is understood as adequacy, not as exhaustiveness or infallibility. I've made no claim of infallible human knowledge, so the notion of infallibility is a straw man -- effectively replacing human knowledge with divine omniscience. Primarily, "knowing" names an human activity, so requiring infallibility as you seem to is a bait and switch tactic. — Dfpolis
First, it is unnecessary. As we can have no epistemic access to any world but our own, actual world, anything we can learn, we can learn from the real world.
If you can't see that using possible worlds as the ultimate basis for defining possibility is circular, I can't help you. — Dfpolis
A "Venus" in another (possible) world is not our Venus. Therefore, one can only be call both "Venus" by equivocation or by universal predication. — Dfpolis
But, in my example, the terms are referential via the same types of experiences that give them reference here. Each rigid designator names is appropriate object: There are morning and evening stars and a second planet. It is just that the references are not what you want them to be. You response will define my possible world out of consideration. So, again, the conclusion is based on how you choose to construct a set of possible worlds, not on any observable facts of the matter -- and that is precisely my objection. — Dfpolis
We are already speaking of the same individual by stipulation, as it might have been in various scenarios. — Snakes Alive
It depends on how you define "metaphysically necessary." Can you define it without invoking possible worlds semantics? If not, how can this claim be relevant to reality? — Dfpolis
You are under the impression that a rigid designator is a term that could not have meant anything other than what it actually means. — Snakes Alive
But then that makes the notion of rigid designators philosophically uninteresting. I simply stipulate that in one possible world the Taj Mahal is made of wood and that this glass of water is composed of H2O2, and so I've declared Kripke's claim that water is necessarily H2O to be wrong (and then he's stipulated something else and so declared his claim correct). — Michael
If water is H20, it makes no sense to 'stipulate' that a glass of water doe snot hold H20. — Snakes Alive
And if the Taj Mahal is made of bricks then it makes no sense to stipulate that in a possible world it's made of wood? Or if my name is Michael then it makes no sense to stipulate that in a possible world my name is Andrew? — Michael
No, it is perfectly possible to stipulate that an individual may have had some properties other than what it has (being made of something different, or having a different name). — Snakes Alive
If 'water' means the same as 'H20'
H202, you will note, is not water, but hydrogen peroxide.
Well that's what I'm calling into question. I might counter by saying that the term "water" refers to whatever liquid makes up the Earth's oceans and falls from the clouds as rain and that in some possible world the chemical composition of that liquid is H2O2. That water is H2O is just a contingent fact about the actual world, much like Earth being the third rock from the Sun. — Michael
And in my case the individual is "this glass of water" and the counterfactual property is the chemical composition. — Michael
Well that's what I'm calling into question. I might counter by saying that the term "water" refers to whatever liquid makes up the Earth's oceans and falls from the clouds as rain and that in some possible world the chemical composition of that liquid is H2O2. That water is H2O is just a contingent fact about the actual world, much like Earth being the third rock from the Sun. — Michael
So I'm saying that in one possible world water is hydrogen peroxide. — Michael
Then what you are supposing is that the glass of water had instead been a glass of hydrogen peroxide. — Snakes Alive
In fact, your suggestion doesn't disambiguate between these two possibilities. Of course water is the substance that fills the oceans, etc. Does that mean that the word 'water' means the same as 'the substance that fills the oceans...', etc. No, obviously these do not mean the same, since it is no contradiction to imagine instead that the oceans had been filled with mercury, and in doing so we are imagining a different sate of affairs, a way things could have been, but aren't.
I must confess, to me this sounds like a contradiction, and I do not know how to suppose such a thing – it is like supposing that 2 and 3 make 6, or something like that. If it were hydrogen peroxide, well then, it would be hydrogen peroxide, not water.
Facts are actual, not merely possible
[/quote]Possible worlds might be a consistent set of posits, they are not a consistent set of facts
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