Then I saw “a new heaven and a new earth,” for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and there was no longer any sea. 2 I saw the Holy City, the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride beautifully dressed for her husband. 3 And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “Look! God’s dwelling place is now among the people, and he will dwell with them. They will be his people, and God himself will be with them and be their God. 4 ‘He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death’ or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away.” — Revelations 21:4
Yes, but even the extension within worlds is artificial, because the worlds (possibilities) are imaginary. — Metaphysician Undercover
Wouldn't you say that there is a sense in which Marxist or Marxist-inspired ideologies are supposed to be based on compassion for the victim or the oppressed or the disenfranchised? — Leontiskos
Vulnerable young British women — AmadeusD
That is contrary to what the SEP article states. Modal logic is intensional. And, it is only the expression of it, the interpretation of separate "possible worlds", which produces extensionality. — Metaphysician Undercover
- So substitution fails across worlds, not because modal logic is intensional,
but because predicate extensions vary from world to world. — Banno
You claimed Reagan created stability. I'm calling utter bullshit — creativesoul
They see it as what happens when the reformist left is undermined by corporate power and replaced with a form of politics that atomises or divides people into smaller interest groups, which ultimately serves those in power rather than challenging them en bloc. — Tom Storm
The older I get, the less certain I am. And the less I care, to be honest... — Tom Storm
Where people stand politically is often a reflex action. How committed they are to the actual implications of their beliefs may be an entirely different matter. I know plenty of left-leaning people who might march on behalf of the homeless, yet if a homeless service tried to open a low-cost apartment building on their street, they could be even more vigorous in opposing it. — Tom Storm
Maybe it’s less about compassion then and more about the role of government in society? — Tom Storm
Could it be that the complaints have changed and that identity politics is annoying to them? — Tom Storm
Just thinking out loud. Isn't the way conservatism functions different across cultures and contexts? There are conservatives on the left, for example, old-school class warriors who dislike the identity politics of the current left. They hope to conserve the left of the early to mid 20th century. In Australia, political conservatives generally support community welfare programs, such as pensions, unemployment benefits and free healthcare, while the radical right (a small boutique group) might oppose such programs. Perhaps the majority of Australians actually favor a form of progressive politics, so conservatism here may resemble the left in countries with a more libertarian (?) ethos. I'm not sure many lefties I know are especially compassionate. How does one gauge that? I don’t always go by their politics. I go by their behaviors toward others in real life. I think a lot of the left take a kind of rights-based perspective, which is somewhat separate from compassion. — Tom Storm
The stability of everyday working-class American lives, generation after generation was never better than the period between Roosevelt and Kennedy/Nixon. — creativesoul
The idea of possible worlds raised the prospect of extensional respectability for modal logic, not by rendering modal logic itself extensional, but by endowing it with an extensional semantic theory — one whose own logical foundation is that of classical predicate logic and, hence, one on which possibility and necessity can ultimately be understood along classical Tarskian lines. Specifically, in possible world semantics, the modal operators are interpreted as quantifiers over possible worlds, as expressed informally in the following two general principles:
Nec A sentence of the form ⌈Necessarily, φ⌉ (⌈◻φ⌉) is true if and only if φ is true in every possible world.[3]
Poss A sentence of the form ⌈Possibly, φ⌉ (⌈◇φ⌉) is true if and only if φ is true in some possible world. — ibid
The possible worlds semantics creates the illusion of extensional objects, "worlds" as a referent. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is the same tactic used by mathematical set theory. They use the concept of "mathematical objects" to create the illusion of extensional referents. It's Platonic realism. — Metaphysician Undercover
Alright, then by statement do you mean a token of some proposition in some possible world? — NotAristotle
You are saying that a proposition is a statement that we all agree on? I have heard the term proposition applied in a more neutral sense. "The cat is on the mat" might be a proposition. It could be true; it could be false; it is not necessarily something we agree on. I think that is what you mean by "statement" however. — NotAristotle
The term "semantics" is a question mark for me here because semantics has to do with meaning, right? So how does meaning factor into a formal logical system? — NotAristotle
but that a Tarskian interpretation of first order logic cannot be reconciled with possible world semantics. — NotAristotle
In addition to the usual sentence operators of classical logic such as ‘and’ (‘∧’), ‘or’ (‘∨’), ‘not’ (‘¬’), ‘if...then’ (‘→’), and, in the first-order case, the quantifiers ‘all’ (‘∀’) and ‘some’ (‘∃’), these languages contain operators intended to represent the modal adverbs ‘necessarily’ (‘□’) and ‘possibly’ (‘◇’). — Possible Worlds, SEP
A concomitant philosophical consequence of this void in modal logic was a deep skepticism, voiced most prominently by Quine, toward any appeal to modal notions in metaphysics generally, notably, the notion of an essential property. (See Quine 1953 and 1956, and the appendix to Plantinga 1974.) — ibid
I’ve always had a hard time understanding the value of the possible worlds way of thinking about things. I read the first section of the SEP article and a little bit of the second section.
I am a self-avowed pragmatist. Can somebody explain how I might use model logic to solve problems or clarify concepts. — T Clark
The introduction conceptually orients; "possible worlds" means something like - that that is opposed to the "actual world" such as a historical counterfactual, or perhaps, an agent acting differently than she or he actually did. — NotAristotle
I admire your confidence in being willing to tackle 60 intricate SEP pages about a generally controversial and deeply complex topic. — RussellA
I understand greater need and greater suffering. But lesser suffering is still worth talking about and improving. Comparing suffering as if to triage the worthy from the worthless is counter-productive to building bonds between those who suffer. — Moliere
These are people she has met personally.
And yes, we have also been involved in exposing scams. — Banno
Come on, you know me better. Not I, Wife.
I'm not posturing, I'm pointing to a problem. And you did ask. — Banno
We've sent aid packages to folk we know in the US who have not been able to get the support they need. — Banno
How would you say it stacks up to the USA's? Looks to be the same in terms of... — Moliere
