What does this have to do with the Barcan formulas? — Snakes Alive
The Barcan formula has generated some controversy because—in terms of possible world semantics—it implies that all objects which exist in any possible world (accessible to the actual world) exist in the actual world, i.e. that domains cannot grow when one moves to accessible worlds. This thesis is sometimes known as actualism—i.e. that there are no merely possible individuals. There is some debate as to the informal interpretation of the Barcan formula and its converse. — Wiki
In your standard modal semantics, all formulae are evaluated with respect to a possible world. — Snakes Alive
it implies that all objects which exist in any possible world (accessible to the actual world) exist in the actual world, — Wallows
Question: Are not all worlds accessible to the actual world part of, or in or attached to, the actual world? If yes, then "possible" worlds are actually impossible worlds. If no, then the implication is denied. Yes? — tim wood
That takes in a lot of ground. It leaves only im-possible worlds outside the actual world. — tim wood
You mean, that all formulae are evaluated with respect to the actual world? — Wallows
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