But what is that relationship on your view? Where does it obtain? Just what, ontologically, is it? That's what I'm asking you. Is it part of the ink or paint or whatever? Where is it located? What is it made of? — Terrapin Station
As I've been explaining to John, the relationships of necessity which are proper to intelligible objects, forms, — Metaphysician Undercover
Say what? First, what the heck are we referring to exactly with "relationships of necessity"? — Terrapin Station
Although we might want to just jump ahead to your idea that there are existents with no spatial location. The very idea of existents (or subsistents, or whatever you might prefer to call them) with no spatial location is incoherent on my view. — Terrapin Station
Do you agree that red is necessarily a colour? That is what I mean by a relationship of necessity, a logical relationship, one such as the relationship between red and colour. A human being is necessarily an animal. An animal is necessarily a living being. A circle is necessarily a geometrical figure. — Metaphysician Undercover
I am talking about relationships which are non-spatial, yet still necessary, such as the ones listed above. I am not talking about non-spatial existents. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you agree that there is a relationship of necessity between a mother and her daughter, yet this relationship is not described in spatial terms? — Metaphysician Undercover
If you're simply saying that the stuff we're conventionally naming red is a color, and a color is necessarily a color, I'd agree with that, or at least I'd say that I can't personally make sense of saying that logical contradictions can obtain. — Terrapin Station
As I said, they are relationships of temporal order. An existing thing is related to something in the future, which does not yet exist. These relationships are understood as possibilities. When a particular possibility (relationship of this type) is recognized as needed, it is determined as necessary, and acting on this necessity brings about the existence of the future thing.So you'd be talking about relationships that don't exist (or subsist, or whatever similar term you'd use for them)? How would there be those relationships in that case? — Terrapin Station
The same unintelligibility results if you do not see the need to say that red is necessarily a colour, — Metaphysician Undercover
An existing thing is related to something in the future, — Metaphysician Undercover
When a particular possibility (relationship of this type) is recognized as needed, it is determined as necessary, — Metaphysician Undercover
When accepted it becomes a necessity, as it is necessary for the sake of the conclusion. — Metaphysician Undercover
The conclusion is the thing which will come about in the future, — Metaphysician Undercover
I can't read that so that it doesn't sound like you simply do not understand modalities. — Terrapin Station
Do you agree that there is a relationship between the present state, and any possible future state, regardless of whether or not that future state actually comes to be? If so, do you agree that this relationship cannot be something existing?I wouldn't agree that that's the case until the future thing comes to be. — Terrapin Station
The more you're responding, the more of a mess your comments are turning out to be. And none of this has anything whatsoever with answering what I asked you. — Terrapin Station
I'm not talking about modalities, — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you agree that there is a relationship between the present state, and any possible future state, regardless of whether or not that future state actually comes to be? — Metaphysician Undercover
You asked me to explain the reality of relationships which have no existence. I understand these relationships as possibilities. What are you failing to grasp? — Metaphysician Undercover
logical separation of thought and subject does seem problematic, especially if one is a physicalist and reduces thoughts to brain activity. We have this physical thing here which is the Sun and this physical thing here which is brain activity, but what is the relationship between the two such that the latter is a thought about the former? Is there a unique kind of physical connection between the two?
It's even more problematic when the thing thought of isn't the sort of thing that can be physically connected to brain activity, e.g. past, future, or distant things.
I just don't think that realism can provide a coherent account of reference (and so nor of truth).
Even though the subject of our thoughts might be conceptually distinct from thought (e.g. when I think about the Sun I'm not thinking about thoughts), it doesn't then follow that the subject is ontologically separate, just as even though the subject of a painting is conceptually distinct from paint (e.g. when I paint a unicorn I'm not painting paint), it doesn't then follow that the subject is ontologically separate (it's not that there's this painting of a unicorn and also that unicorn).
Haha, you're talking about possibility and necessity, so yes you are. That's what modalities are. — Terrapin Station
But yeah, I asked about the idea of saying that there is something that doesn't exist, which is a simple contradiction--you're saying that there is something that there isn't. — Terrapin Station
No, logical modalities are a very specialized use of these terms, possibility and necessity. — Metaphysician Undercover
you flatly refuse to recognize that in common parlance we refer to things which are possible, and things which are necessary, according to the primary definitions of those terms, — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you agree that there is a relationship between the present state, and any possible future state, regardless of whether or not that future state actually comes to be? — Metaphysician Undercover
No, not at all. — Terrapin Station
do you consider it incorrect to claim that never-actualized possibilities can still be real? — aletheist
Yes, although there's some ambiguity there given that "real" has historically been used with so many different connotations. — Terrapin Station
And yeah, I'd basically agree with Peirce in that, although since this would often be misunderstood, I'd hasten to add that I'm not a strong determinist. — Terrapin Station
wouldn't say that I see possibilities as "pure fictions." But I simply see them as something not precluded from occurring given a world that's not strongly deterministic through and through. In other words, it's simply a way to talk about the fact that some thing(s) could happen. — Terrapin Station
Real possibilities are distinguished from fictional possibilities through relationships to what has actual existence. In other words, without such relationships anyone could claim all sorts of absurd possibilities, such as the possibility that I could jump to the moon, or some other nonsense. — Metaphysician Undercover
agree with the subset comments. But I'd say what distinguishes ontological possibility from logical possibility is that logical possibility is simply something non-contradictory in the context of a particular logic, whereas ontological possibility is something non-contradictory that could obtain within the contstraints of a given actual world. — Terrapin Station
Again, I wouldn't say that possibilities are real, although depending on alternate ways of defining "real," I might agree with that. However, it would have to be some way of defining real so that it doesn't amount to saying that non-actualized possibilities somehow exist/subsist/occur/obtain/etc. (whatever term like that that someone might want to use). — Terrapin Station
If an ontological possibility is something which could obtain within the constraints of a given actual world, — Metaphysician Undercover
However, we still have to deal with the reality that some of these non-existent things have a relationship with existing things. — Metaphysician Undercover
It only obtains when it's actualized. (All actuals are possible.) Otherwise, it's just a way of talking about the fact that something (some object, event, etc.) isn't precluded/prohibited by anything. — Terrapin Station
Saying that something that doesn't exist (or occur, or whatever--it's important to not get hung up on the particular word we're using) has a relationship with anything is simply nonsense. There's nothing to have a relationship if it doesn't exist/occur/whatever term you'd use. — Terrapin Station
Logical possibility is simply (p) a la something non-contradictory in the context of a particular logic, whereas ontological possibility is (p) a la something non-contradictory that could obtain within the contstraints of a given actual world. — Terrapin Station
That doesn't mean, however, that possibilities occur (or whatever word we'd use) or that they're somehow "there" to have relationships with things when they're not actualized. — Terrapin Station
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