Maybe you think you are in charge, or that physics doesn't apply to you because you are special?
For the rest of us, Unitary Quantum Mechanics solves the problem of the ontological status of counterfactuals. — tom
Right, then a counterfactual quantum event rather than a future quantum event. — Michael
How do you account for its truth, given that the laws of nature do not necessitate a particular outcome? — Michael
For the rest of us, Unitary Quantum Mechanics solves the problem of the ontological status of counterfactuals. — tom
If I say, "if I were to strike this porcelain dish with a hammer, then it would shatter," or "if I had struck this porcelain dish with a hammer, then it would have shattered," both of these utterances seem to be truth-apt (that is, possessing a truth value), yet what do they "correspond" to? — Arkady
What would be an example of a "counterfactual quantum event"? — aletheist
Peirce was ahead of his time in recognizing the reality of absolute chance; he held that the laws of nature are not completely exceptionless, such that the slight deviations in our measurements of phenomena are not solely due to error. In other words, all laws of nature are in that sense statistical, even the ones that we treat as deterministic.
I used to call them "counterfactuals," until someone on this forum insisted that by definition, this means that they must be "counter to fact." I switched to "subjunctive conditionals" to preclude any such terminological debates. — aletheist
It's called decoherence. — tom
OK, but I think the OP meant discuss a semantic problem that is raised specifically by subjunctive conditionals that have a false antecedent -- that is, by counterfactual conditionals in the strict sense. — Pierre-Normand
Some counterfactual claim about Schrodinger's cat, for example. — Michael
If the laws of nature are not such that if we had done this then that must have happened (i.e. chance is involved), then your initial explanation doesn't work. — Michael
To explain this further, the OP raises a problem with the correspondence theory of truth. Statements are said to be true if they correspond to some obtaining state of affairs, but statements like "if A had happened then B would have happened" are said to be true even though neither A nor B are obtaining states of affairs. — Michael
I guess something more like, "If the bottle of poison were to be broken, then the cat would be dead." Not sure this gets at your point, though. — aletheist
What about: "If Pierce had the power to see to it that the stone drops during a lecture, then, if Pierce had dropped the stone during a lecture, it would have fallen."
It seems just as true as the first sentence, but not to be ultimately grounded in some existent having any latent power. — csalisbury
To explain this further, the OP raises a problem with the correspondence theory of truth. — Michael
The statement was "If I had opened the box at 3:00pm then I would have found the cat to be dead" ... So how do you make sense of that statement's truth-value? — Michael
That is the position seemingly endorsed (at least tacitly) by many Humeans that whatever is possible is actual, and whatever isn't actual is impossible. — Pierre-Normand
Then how do you make sense of counterfactuals being true? If the laws of nature are not such that if we had done this then that must have happened (i.e. chance is involved), then your initial explanation doesn't work. — Michael
The various theories of truth--correspondence, coherence, consensus, instrumental--only arise within the context of nominalism regarding generals. Pragmatic realism (i.e., pragmaticism) understands truth as encompassing all of these notions, because it is defined as what an infinite community of investigators would believe after an indefinite inquiry. — aletheist
That is the position seemingly endorsed (at least taci — Pierre-Normand
This seems like an alternative version of modal collapse, which today is widely (though not universally) considered to be a fallacy in modal logic. Usually it is presented as the claim that whatever is actual is necessary, hence it entails strict determinism. — aletheist
So verificationism? — Michael
Surely counterfactuals are a problem for verificationism. How do you verify "if X had happened then Y would have happened"? — Michael
This is a bit tricky because the truth of this sentence seems to entail the position Micheal Ayers labeled actualism (in his brilliant The Refutation of Determinism: An Essay in Philosophical Logic, London: Methuen (1968)). That is the position seemingly endorsed (at least tacitly) by many Humeans that whatever is possible is actual, and whatever isn't actual is impossible. This is also the view that there are no unactualized powers. That's because the subjunctive conditional statement that you propose would entail that the failure for Pierce to exercise his power would count as (conclusive) evidence that he lacks the power.
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