Which sounds like Luke is asking not about an empty world, but about there being no world ("a non-existent world"). Maybe he is confusing the two? — Pfhorrest
As I understand it, modal realists consider what is possible (i.e. possible worlds) to be actual — Luke
As for your own version of modal realism where "actual" is indexical — Luke
For the actualist it is not logically impossible that nothing might exist, whereas for the modal realist it is logically impossible that nothing might exist. — Luke
where "actual" is indexical, presumably this means that the "actual" world is the one in which one (currently) resides/inhabits. This seems to imply that a possible world requires someone to inhabit it in order for it to be "actual". If so, then how can there actually be an empty possible world? Moreover, can there exist an actual possible world without inhabitants? — Luke
a modal realist way of thinking is like imagining the universe to be infinite where there is many versions of world — FlaccidDoor
Not a contradiction? Or, at least, a reification fallacy? — 180 Proof
The modal realist says that other possible worlds exist in the same way that the actual world exists, but not that they are actual, — Pfhorrest
Both an actualist and a modal realist can use the language of possible worlds the same, they just take it to mean different things ontologically speaking. — Pfhorrest
In that language of possible worlds, under either interpretation, it makes no logical sense to say "there's a possible world where there is no world". So in either case, it's not logically possible that there be no world at all. — Pfhorrest
If "possible worlds" is just another name for "possibilities", then it seems uncontroversial that modal realists and actualists alike believe in the existence of possibilities.
The difference seems to be that modal realists consider those possibilities to be actualised (as other possible worlds), whereas actualists considers those possibilities to be unactualised (except in this world). — Luke
The presentist is like the actualist, while the eternalist is like the modal realist, just regarding time instead of possible worlds. — Pfhorrest
Is there any possible version of the actual world that is 'the negation of the actual world' (i.e. nothingness)?Actualism: every possible chess match constitutes chess itself.
Possibilism (i.e. modal realism): every possible ruleset of every possible game is a distinct counterpart of the ruleset of chess.
Actualism: the territory consists of – affords – every possible map of the territory.
Possibilism (i.e. modal realism): every merely possible territory is a counterpart of (this) actual possible territory.
Actualism: every possible world is a version – configuration – of the actual world.
Possibilism: every merely possible world is a counterpart of (this) actual possible world.
but none of them would be "nothing" and be a world at the same time. — FlaccidDoor
Does this mean you concede that it does make logical sense for an actualist to say "there's a possible world where there is no world"? — Luke
Does this mean you concede that it does make logical sense for an actualist to say "there's a possible world where there is no world"?
— Luke
Nope, because that's like saying "before there was time...".
You could talk about a time in which nothing existed though, or a possible world in which nothing exists. But that's still a time, or a possible world, respectively. — Pfhorrest
Nope, because that's like saying "before there was time...". — Pfhorrest
You could talk about a time in which nothing existed though, or a possible world in which nothing exists. But that's still a time, or a possible world, respectively. — Pfhorrest
WHAT is empty?Empty in not containing any individuals - hence Noether's Theorem could not be proved. — Banno
The possibility (now) of there coming to be no possibilities (at some future time) is not illogical. — Luke
If there could come to be a state where nothing exists, it would still remain (logically) possible for something to exist — Pfhorrest
It may be a possibility for the actual world to become empty, devoid of things. But that possibility is still the possibility of an empty world, not of some kind of non-world. — Pfhorrest
I’m not saying it’s impossible that something exists — Luke
The realisation of the possible annihilation of this world would make it a non-world — Luke
You said "The possibility (now) of there coming to be no possibilities (at some future time)". If there are no possibilities, then there is no possibility of something existing -- it is impossible for something to exist. If that was just misspeaking on your part, then nevermind. — Pfhorrest
If this world were annihilated, then there would be no possibilities. — Luke
...even in a future state of this world where everything is annihilated, it is still logically possible for something to exist. — Pfhorrest
What “world” would remain for something to exist in? It’s not that everything in this world would be annihilated, but the world itself. — Luke
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