I suggest that the various meanings of “necessity” are linked by an Analogy of Proportionality. In each instance, something is “necessary” if it is logically entailed by some set of premises, which I’ll call its “basis.” In the first paragraph I noted the basis of several kinds of necessity. — Dfpolis
Most people would agree that there are many kinds of necessity – moral, physical, logical and metaphysical being examples. An action would be seen as morally necessary if one’s ethical system required that it be done. An event would be physically necessary if it were determined by the initial conditions and the laws of nature. A conclusion is logically necessary if it is validly entailed by the premises one accepts. Something is metaphysically necessary if it is required by the very nature of being. — Dfpolis
First, it's nice to see a longer post here that's well-written. — Terrapin Station
I think we can observe possibility in at least some cases. — Terrapin Station
it doesn't seem to me that necessarily vs possibly might easily obscure equivocations in modal logic. — Terrapin Station
Which implies not-necessary with respect to another set of premises, and perhaps even necessarily-not with respect to even another set. — tim wood
These examples seem like they're all the same. Aren't they really only saying "A (the necessary thing) implies B?" — T Clark
My guidance would be to clarify the basis of modal claims. — Dfpolis
E.g., should we kill Bob? Well, if all killing is wrong, then no. If murder is wrong but some killing right, then maybe. And if under our understanding of things, Bob should be killed, then yes. I'd like to think we can do better - do you see a way? — tim wood
That would be "good for," yes? If we let yours go as a definition of the good, then lots of bad things become good.The properties that make something “good” are those that make it suitable to its purpose. — Dfpolis
So do I. But there are those even here on TPF vehemently opposed to such a notion, although to be sure I have yet to see anything cogent from them - beyond mere claim and assertion.Well, I do think there is an objective basis for ethics. — Dfpolis
What that means is that the analogies do not necessitate certain results, but they allow for a certain amount of ambiguity and creativity. — Hanover
That would be "good for," yes? If we let yours go as a definition of the good, then lots of bad things become good. — tim wood
In each instance, something is “necessary” if it is logically entailed by some set of premises, which I’ll call its “basis.” — Dfpolis
1. Modal logic need not be a separate branch of logic. Rather modality reflects ordinary deduction — Dfpolis
I discuss analogy at some length in considering the rules of evidence in my book. — Dfpolis
Question: would you argue that God is necessary for the argument so far, or would you allow it could be established on secure ground on belief alone, or possibility alone, or the ethical stance, i.e., reason, alone? — tim wood
It is often said that logic provides our paradigm for necessity, but this does not mean that all necessity is logical necessity. For example, it is also often said that causation is physical necessity. So (setting aside Hume) the impact of one billiard ball upon a second billiard ball renders the movement of the second ball necessary. But this is physical necessity, not logical necessity. — Theologian
I don't disagree that certain entailment can be applied to different bases, but... so what? — Theologian
And the fact that we may apply this concept to different things does [Edit: Oops! I meant DOES NOT] suggest multiple meanings. — Theologian
Just out of curiosity, what book? — Theologian
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