there exist at least three types of claim in philosophy, two of which are epistemological (a priori and empirical), and one of which metaphysical (ontological commitments) — numberjohnny5
Further, the latter type is necessarily supported by the former. In other words, ontology and its commitments is necessarily based upon epistemology. — numberjohnny5
*Are "ontological commitments" identical to "ontological claims"? — numberjohnny5
(II) Are ontological commitments necessarily true? — numberjohnny5
(1) "Socrates is Socrates" is ontologically necessary. — numberjohnny5
Not that you'd disagree with this (hence your "at least"), but I think it's important to stress that there aren't just those three. — Terrapin Station
Further, the latter type is necessarily supported by the former. In other words, ontology and its commitments is necessarily based upon epistemology. — numberjohnny5
I don't agree with that. In my view it depends on the philosopher in question. Different people start in different places, see different things--if anything--as foundational. — Terrapin Station
I wouldn't say they necessarily are. Ontological claims could just be from a logical perspective. That if x is the case, then y follows ontologically. That doesn't have to be a commitment to y. — Terrapin Station
The only interpretation where I'd say that's ontologically necessary is when we're simply talking about logical identity: A=A. — Terrapin Station
I wouldn't say that logical identity being ontologically necessary relies on empirical claims. It's strictly a logical matter in my view. — Terrapin Station
I assumed that in order to make ontological commitments about what there is, you'd necessarily need to have an epistemological "channel" in which to based them on. — numberjohnny5
So in your example, ontological claims can refer to how a particular logical statement obtains (in light of a particular logical system)? So ontological claims can refer to the reasoning that occurs in different systems/branches of philosophy without having to commit to the particular claims any of those systems/branches are making. — numberjohnny5
As an aside then, do you reject the first of Quine's "Two Dogmas" re analyticity? — numberjohnny5
So in other words, ontological necessity is a priori, in your view? — numberjohnny5
That's an ontological claim, but it doesn't amount to making an ontological commitment. — Terrapin Station
The problem with discussing stuff like that with me is that I'm a subjectivist on meaning (as well as a subjectivist on truth for that matter), and whether something is analytically true, on my view, is simply a matter of how individuals think about the propositions in question. I don't buy any sort of objectivist analysis of how language works. I think that that whole approach is a huge gaffe that's led to a lot of effectively useless work. — Terrapin Station
I see. So the difference between an ontological claim and ontological commitment is that the former just simply arrives at or states, for example, that P, without necessarily accepting or rejecting that P, whereas the latter would involve accepting, rejecting, or being neutral that P. Is that what you're saying? — numberjohnny5
would you feel more prepared to share your thoughts re Quine's "Two Dogmas"? — numberjohnny5
I've posted so much today I don't really have the energy to write something more detailed about it at the moment. I might be inspired to do so later. Maybe we should start a thread on it, by the way. — Terrapin Station
Our awareness of the phenomenal leads us to epistemological analysis, — Cavacava
Ontological commitment suggests necessity, but it is subject to continued empirical verification, every thing that is, is contingent . What is experienced is not necessarily circumscribed by our logical analysis. — Cavacava
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