The counterfactual scenario is completely inaccessible. For example if I say "If the Germans had won WW2" How is it possible to say anything true about this scenario? There is no truth of the matter because X didn't happen. — Andrew4Handel
I've myself wondered if a robust theory of truth such as the correspondence theory can adequately incorporate counterfactual statements into their stable (not to mention certain types of future-tensed statements). — Arkady
Counterfactuals are interesting and difficult, but not mysterious. They can be given reasonable treatments that don't commit to bizarre metaphysics.
Lewis' 1973 Counterfactuals will help.
Also: part of the above is that it kind of usea particular individuals to illustrate general laws (i.e. if any individual a with power b does c, then d). The reason the sentence in my example is true has absolutely nothing to do with alex. — csalisbury
I've realized I've wasted a lot of time constructing myself the left-out arguments in continental philosophy, and it's so refreshing to read people who spell it out. (That said, I still think many of the continentals make extremely good points and have a better synoptic vision. I would like to read them in conjunction.) — csalisbury
The formalization, more than just explicitness, gives a sense that there are actual stakes to what's being done – because if you need your models to produce certain results, and they don't, you've failed, and in a concrete way, and this failure leads to a possible metric of improvement. — The Great Whatever
No, what makes the first statement true is not some "power" that Peirce has. Rather, it is the fact that there is a real tendency in the universe for things with mass (such as a stone and the earth) to move toward each other in the absence of some intervening object (such as a man's body). — aletheist
Sure, how would you distinguish between the accidental and the necessary when dealing with particular conditionals? Especially when the Peircean view - now backed by quantum theory - sees the world as irreducibly spontaneous (because never completely constrained by its own habits).
So you have to take the probabilistic big picture view - as in, Popperian falsification. Pragmatism only claims to minimise our uncertainty about some proposition. In that sense, absolute verification is a naive realist's pipedream. — apokrisis
how do you falsify the counterfactual "if X had happened then Y would have happened"? — Michael
Remember that I was replying on your specific question about Schrödinger's cat/Peircean epistemology. So I'm talking about counterfactuality in the context of what QM would call counterfactual definiteness. — apokrisis
My point was that counterfactuality amounts to having some theory in play. You can be sure of X because you are sure of what would count as not-x. So counterfactuality becomes the basis on which we can verify or falsify. — apokrisis
So given a counterfactual claim such as "had I opened the box at this particular time I would have found the cat to be dead", something other than a reference to the laws of nature must be used to explain its truth value (assuming it has one). — Michael
For any statement to be true, it must agree with the laws of physics. This goes for factual and counterfactual statements. — tom
I just said that QM gives you a probabilty of either statement being the true one. — apokrisis
So given the counterfactual statements "if I had opened the box at time t I would have found the cat to be dead" and "if I had opened the box at time t I would have found the cat to be alive", which agrees with the laws of physics? — Michael
So we have to abandon the principle of bivalence? Some statements do not have exactly one truth value? — Michael
Yeah sure. Just like a coin toss. Because we can only give a probability of heads vs tails, we must abandon foolish notions about there being heads or tails. :-} — apokrisis
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