No, not on that basis because, if for no other reason, both positions posit only a single entity / principle. To paraphrase Einstein: "Everything should be made as simple as possible, but no simpler."In applying Occam’s Razor to these two positions, shouldn’t we accept necessitarianism over contingentarianism due to parsimony? — Paul Michael
Necessitarianism suggests there is exactly one way reality can be, which is the way it actually is. In contrast, contingentarianism suggests there is more than one way reality could have been. — Paul Michael
No, not on that basis because, if for no other reason, both positions posit only a single entity / principle. — 180 Proof
1) Are there any physical consequences if necessitarianism is correct and contingentarianism is not? — T Clark
2) Is there any way to determine whether necessitarianism is true and contingentarianism is not? — T Clark
3) Are there any philosophical consequences if necessitarianism is correct and contingentarianism is not? — T Clark
I think there would have to be proof that separates some fundamental laws from their derivatives for contingentarianism to work. We can only meaningfully speak about things in existence so I think that dictates everything. — Shwah
If necessitarianism is true, then libertarian free will definitely cannot exist — Paul Michael
There might be a way to determine which is true logically, but I do not think we can determine which is true empirically. — Paul Michael
I don't understand why this would be true. I don't see why either philosophical option couldn't be consistent with determinism. — T Clark
On the other hand, I did think of a potential philosophical effect - If necessitarianism were true, then the fine-tuning argument for God would never arise. — T Clark
To me, that means it is a metaphysical question. I won't inflict my oft preached sermon on metaphysical entities here. — T Clark
If one takes libertarian (or even certain versions of compatibilist) free will to mean that one could have done otherwise, then necessitarianism being true would make this impossible because nothing in reality could have been otherwise, including our choices and actions. — Paul Michael
Yeah, more or less identically with actualism (a position I favor contra both possibilism & modal realism).Doesn’t contingentarianism suggest that there genuinely are, in some sense of the word ‘are’, ways reality could have been? — Paul Michael
This is like saying that predictions such as "Black Holes" and the "Cosmological Constant" which are implied by, but not described in, General Relativity make the theory less parsimonius than Newtonian physics. As I understand the topic, contingentism, like necessitism, posits only one fundamental principle – acausality or causality (like 'stochastical or deterministic'), respectively – and the equivalent quantity of these respective posits do not themselves in comparison to one another raise the issue of parsimony. Ockham's Razor only pertains to posits, or assumptions, (of entities) and not to conceptual implications (or theoretical predictions) derived from them.It must hold this position because if it didn’t then it would collapse into necessitarianism.
How is that different from plain old, vanilla determinism? — T Clark
Necessitarianism is stronger than determinism because determinism allows for the possibility that the causal chain as a whole could have been different, even though every cause within the chain could not have happened differently, given the antecedent causes. — Paul Michael
determinism allows for the possibility that the causal chain as a whole could have been different, even though every cause within the chain could not have happened differently, given the antecedent causes. — Paul Michael
To me, as the saying goes - it's a distinction without a difference. — T Clark
So two different causal chains can lead to the same outcome? — EugeneW
Necessitarianism says..... — EugeneW
If parsimony is our only criterion, necessitarianism wins by a mile — Cuthbert
If we are not bothered whether our theory is true or not, let's go with necessitarianism. — Cuthbert
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