That bolded "another" is the problem here. It doesn't have to be another possible world, just some possible world. It can be this one, or another, and still be some one."If I punch my laptop screen, it might break" doesn't have to mean "There is another possible world in which my laptop screen is broken as a result of my punching it" surely? It could equally mean that it is something which might happen in this one. — fdrake
That bolded "another" is the problem here. It doesn't have to be another possible world, just some possible world. It can be this one, or another, and still be some one. — Pfhorrest
I think I disagree. — quickly
The question then becomes: which accessibility relations are germane to our universe? — quickly
But specifying an acceptable answer determines a metaphysics, and therefore circumscribes the set of accessible worlds. — quickly
I think I disagree. The best analysis of modal language we possess is possible worlds semantics. By systematically translating modal talk into talk about possible worlds, questions about counterfactuals can be made precise. — quickly
But this is very backwards, at least in part, if you're using a modal logic to represent metaphysical intuitions, the metaphysical intuitions, the axioms and the theorems all interact; a feeding forward of "acceptable answers" into "metaphysical accounts" makes the appropriate metaphysics for a domain rather arbitrary; or if not arbitrary, we consider the acceptable answers through metaphysical arguments, and at that point we're not just talking about the formal structure of a modal logic either. The extra logical considerations in part determine what logical structure seems appropriate to represent them, so do in part the theorems and axioms of the logic. — fdrake
I think this is a mistake. In order to make sense of a phenomenon - modal talk - you pick a simple formal model that captures some of its structure, and then you try to make sense of your model by studying more of its structure and trying to relate it back to phenomenology. This is what's backwards. You shouldn't lose sight of the phenomenology, and don't expect to find in your model any insight that you didn't front-load there. — SophistiCat
My specific contention is that once the set of acceptable answers is determined, the metaphysical and logical questions are mostly settled and usually irrelevant. The "phenomenology" and "intuitions" are mostly determined by asking someone what they're looking for in an answer. — quickly
My specific contention is that once the set of acceptable answers is determined, the metaphysical and logical questions are mostly settled and usually irrelevant. The "phenomenology" and "intuitions" are mostly determined by asking someone what they're looking for in an answer. — quickly
The only reason, I think, that metaphysical questions concerning modality seem largely irrelevant to you (in this context) is that you (seem to) think that "determining the set of acceptable answers" has nothing to do with reasoning metaphysically about modality. Note that you expressed this using the word "acceptable"; itself a modality. Reasoning about the sense of "acceptable" there; what is appropriate for the situation is in part extra-logical; you have to think about the logic from the outside while negotiating its axiomatisation to ensure it works well for the sense of modality in question. — fdrake
I guess this turns on the question of what sort of an answer we are looking for: descriptive, explanatory or prescriptive. If descriptive, then reducing the subject to a formal modal logic provides a rough sketch of an answer, but it loses much of the meat in the process of reduction, and the result is only approximate at best, because in reality our modal talk/thinking does not perfectly conform to this system. — SophistiCat
I was using "acceptable" as a substitute for "satisfying," which I think eliminates the circularity you pointed out. — quickly
For example, an engineer might be satisfied with a description of the screen's material properties. This might not satisfy the philosopher, but it will satisfy anyone asking whether actual punches will break actual screens. — quickly
You’ll have to explain further the point of this thread?
It means that we don't know whether they will or they wont buy ice cream.
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