I think uncomfortable numbers can still be said to exist in the sense that there is a formal abstraction that defines them.
I see your point though and it is interesting. — m-theory
I would be surprised because you do not seem to be that educated in logic, — m-theory
Frequently a world is an abstract object. Hamlet's world is abstract to some extent. That means that if I said Hamlet was Argentinian, you could correct me. — Mongrel
This tale also reminds me of the issue about whether to redo Huck Finn with the word 'nigger' removed or replaced, which it seems to me would take the story away from being Twain's, as the world of Huck Finn is related to the author and his place and times. I think, for instance, that every production of a Euripides play however modernised pays a certain respect to Euripides' vision.Then consider the Kipling/Twain issue. Twain tells Kipling he's going to rewrite Tom Sawyer. Kipling says that isn't possible. Twain says he can because it's his story. Who's right? — Mongrel
So the argument is that what constraints don't care about can be treated modally as accidental rather than universal properties. If a difference doesn't make a difference, then what it "actually is" becomes logically a matter of indifference.
If you are applying this to individuation - the prime target of predicate logic - then it says we know Algol well enough not to mistake her for any other dog even if we were to encounter her in some entirely different world. There is something essential about her that defines her.
Or at least - reductionism being desperate to cash out nominalism - there is so little different about her (our "mental" idea of her, heh, heh) that we are content to take this counterpart Algol as a token of a type. I mean, a sign of a thing. — apokrisis
So the informal picture is that worlds are constructed by going from the particular to the general - recognising the increasingly generic constraints that can still bind a set of parts as a whole. — apokrisis
Algol of another possible world is in fact an entirely different dog. In discussion of modal logic, many people fail to understand individuation. They errounosuly take semiotic similarity to mean two entirely different states are the same. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Algol of another possible world is in fact an entirely different dog. — TheWillowOfDarkness
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