if some thing is true a priori, is it also necessary?
— Banno
....To say that something, as a consequence of something else, is necessarily so, is just to say that given the antecedent, the consequent necessarily follows - just logic 101. But does it imply existential necessity? — tim wood
Here's something new - two sorts of necessity: logical and existential.
But if being necessary is being true in all possible worlds, then they are much the same. — Banno
But as I understand it, in PWS the existential and universal quantifiers are understood within each possible world, while the necessity and possibility quantifiers are understood across all possible worlds. — Banno
If an individual or group sometimes has a given property, sometimes not, then it is a possible property. — Banno
If an individual or group of individuals has the same predicate in all possible worlds, it necessarily has that predicate: Bachelors are unmarried in all possible worlds. — Banno
b. The Common Principle of all Analytical Judgments is the Law of Contradiction. --- All analytical judgments depend wholly on the law of Contradiction, and are in their nature a priori cognitions, whether the concepts that supply them with matter be empirical or not. For the predicate of an affirmative analytical judgment is already contained in the concept of the subject, of which it cannot be denied without contradiction. In the same way its opposite is necessarily denied of the subject in an analytical, but negative, judgment, by the same law of contradiction. Such is the nature of the judgments: all bodies are extended, and no bodies are unextended (i.e., simple).
For this very reason all analytic judgments are a priori even when the concepts are empirical, as, for example, "Gold is a yellow metal," for to know this I require no experience beyond my concept of gold as a yellow metal. It is, in fact, the very concept, and I need only analyze it, without looking beyond it elsewhere.
That's actually the definition of contingency. Possibility is just defined in truth in at least one world. Necessary truths, for example, are still possible truths. Contingency means true in some worlds but false in others. — MindForged
This has always been odd for me. It seems like one could have a married bachelor. What makes one married is to hold a certain legal status, yes? Well consider a state of affairs where there's a contradiction in the local laws. Law A says "Yada yada Those holding a marriage certificate are married" and Law J says "Etc etc Gay people cannot be married". Now some gay person managed to get married (certificate and all), and there is no judicial precedent in how judge which law overrules the other. On the usual assumption that law decides what is true in these cases (because that's how we know who is considered married), one would seem to have a married bachelor. — MindForged
"Gold is a yellow metal" or "a bachelor is an unmarried man" — tim wood
I am glad you like it, I infer from that you can answer my question as to what possible worlds are. Were it clear, I would not tax you to make it clear. What it cannot mean is conceivable worlds. That leaves "possible." But what does possible mean? In part of the SEP article, possible worlds seems to be just those worlds that could alternatively have been, if something in the actual world had been other than it was. Which is to say that the possible worlds, by virtue of not being, and consequently of not being possible, are merely conjectural, and even that only minimally (for "minimally, read asymptotically not at all).I like the entry Possible Worlds and Modal Logic in SEP. — Banno
...then it seems right to say that if there is gold, then it is a metal and it is yellow... — tim wood
But in my opinion you're missing a deeper point. Perhaps this way. Posit something certain. Then subject it to your criticism that maybe someday somebody might dig up or discover.... Allow that, and absolutely nothing stands. — tim wood
you want to call it gold... but you want it to be different. — tim wood
Relevance? — Banno
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