I am not subsuming the hope that P under the same category as P. — Pierre-Normand
judgements are intentional attitudes ... the very same proposition P can be the content of different sorts attitudes other than judgements, such as the hope that P, the fear that P, ... — Pierre-Normand
Judgements don't make assertions. People make judgements and assertions, and they can assert the contents of the judgements that they are making. They can also assert the negation of a judgement that they are making, in which case they are lying. — Pierre-Normand
Sorry for the late response, busy few days. — MindForged
Except that our justification about what's possible and what's not is usually grounded in the same thing as what we justify our belief about the actual world. — MindForged
P is possible with respect to a set of facts or propositions, S, if P does not contradict S.
I do think "facts" should be restricted to intelligible reality. — Dfpolis
This makes total nonsense of everyday uses of modality. — MindForged
gnoring the fact that outside of modal realism possible worlds aren't postulated to be literal places, your criticism is clearly that lack of epistemic access to possible worlds is a problem for using possible world semantics. — MindForged
My point was that we don't have direct access to the actual world either — MindForged
So if I'm eight years old and I say "I could be a doctor", this can be understood as saying that there is some possible world (however you understand those to be) where I am in fact an MD. — MindForged
And then say I eventually do become a doctor, meaning the actual world is one such possible world where my claim turned out true. Well that's perfectly obvious justification for my original modal statement being thought true. — MindForged
Whether it's conceivability or similarity or perception, there are any number of proposed ways one can access possible worlds — MindForged
"access" here is not causal, other worlds aren't "out there" acting on us in the actual world any more than other abstract objects act on us to give us access to them. — MindForged
There's no reason to suppose that our sensory representation of an object is identical to how our sense's are modified by the object in question — MindForged
It's not identical, you're simply pointing out an inverse relationship — MindForged
But the point being made is there's absolutely no way to know that our representation of the small amount of sensory data our representational apparatus uses to construct our perception is infallibly done. — MindForged
Without that infallibility, we don't have even quasi-access to the world. — MindForged
Oh my god, so your argument is, literally, that the world "possible" is there. — MindForged
P is possible if there is at least one world in which P is the case — MindForged
— Dfpolis
Still, they are not our world, as, if they are different in any way, they are not identical to our actual world. Any world that is not identical to our world is a different world. As each is a different world, each (actual or potential) object in them is a different object from any object in out actual world. — Dfpolis
The worlds aren't identical, that wasn't my claim. But the object with the name "Venus" is picked out by the same name no matter the world. — MindForged
Still, they are not our world, as, if they are different in any way, they are not identical to our actual world. Any world that is not identical to our world is a different world. As each is a different world, each (actual or potential) object in them is a different object from any object in out actual world. — Dfpolis
The worlds aren't identical, that wasn't my claim. But the object with the name "Venus" is picked out by the same name no matter the world. — MindForged
"The oldest child [in a particular family]" is description, not a proper name, — MindForged
"Disposed" is a modal notion itself, meaning to be "inclined towards" or something one might do given their characteristics. — MindForged
Does this sentence literally mean that "gato" means "cat?" No – it just means "the cat is sleeping." However, from the true utterance of that sentence in that context, I learn something other than the literal content of the sentence, viz. something about how the words used to express its literal content are used. — Snakes Alive
And indeed in saying such a thing, my primary intention may to to impart this information, not the (trivial) necessary proposition. — Snakes Alive
I was thinking of propositions as Fregean propositions: or as ways the world (or aspects of the world) might conceivably be thought to be. — Pierre-Normand
Of course, the very same proposition P can be the content of different sorts attitudes other than judgements, such as the hope that P, the fear that P, the conjecture that P, the antecedent of the conditional judgement that if P then Q, etc. — Pierre-Normand
It seems to me that proper names (and every other sort of singular referring expression or device, such as demonstratives, indexicals, definite descriptions, etc.) can be construed both as referring to particulars and to intelligible aspects of reality. — Pierre-Normand
There is no way, on my view, to refer to any empirical object other than referring to it as an intelligible aspect of reality. — Pierre-Normand
we can't refer to (or think of) a determinate object without subsuming it under some determinate sortal concept that expresses this object's specific criteria of persistence and individuation. — Pierre-Normand
that although the references of both names don't change (and still remain numerically identical to each other), the user of those names, who previously was using them with distinct senses, now comes to be able to (and indeed becomes rationally obligated) to use them both with the same Fregean sense since she can no longer rationally judge something to be truly predicated of one without her also judging it to be truly predicated of the other. — Pierre-Normand
It seems to me that you are using "materially the same" and "formally the same" roughly in the same way in which a Fregean would use "having the same reference" and "having the same sense", respectively. — Pierre-Normand
I am unsure how this follows since I don't hold the world (or objects) to be something other than the intelligible world (or intelligible objects). We don't have empirical or cognitive access to pure noumena. — Pierre-Normand
However, the cognitive significance of a sentence, i.e. what we're capable of learning from the fact that the sentence expresses a true proposition, outruns its literal semantic content. — Snakes Alive
Given that they co-refer or not, they express necessarily true or necessarily false propositions. That you are unaware of which it is, and that this depends on the meaning of the words, is where the feeling of contingency comes from. For it is contingent whether the sentence expresses a necessarily true or necessarily false proposition. — Snakes Alive
The justification is that we don't have Objective access to "the world". — Pattern-chaser
most philosophers do not think that possible worlds are literally real worlds that they inquire about. They think of possible worlds as more akin to logically consistent stories about how things might be. — PossibleAaran
Some philosophers think that Philosophy involves making "discoveries" about "possible worlds" — PossibleAaran
I think possible worlds talk is usually intended as talk about logical possibility. I can't remember an article in which that isn't quite clear. — PossibleAaran
philosophers will use technical language where plain language would do, and this has the effect of making philosophy seem incredibly convoluted to those outside of it, and even leads to errors for those within it. I think possible worlds talk is like this. — PossibleAaran
we don't have Objective access, so everything you say about "the world" is necessarily speculative, and will always be so. — Pattern-chaser
without the jargon, can you say what it would mean to say that this physical world has physical or ontological reality or existence that the hypothetical logical system that I described doesn't have? — Michael Ossipoff
Is there a physics experiment that can establish that this physical world is other than a logical system, a system of logical and mathematical relation--as physicist Michael Faraday suggested in 1844? — Michael Ossipoff
And if you say that the difference is that this physical world is "actual", then of course I'll ask what you mean by "actual". — Michael Ossipoff
or even independently.
I interpret that as referring to other possibility-worlds, logical systems. — Michael Ossipoff
As David Lewis suggested, each such physical possibility-world is “actual” for its inhabitants (if it has any). The word “actual” is best defined as an adjective to denote the physical possibility-world in which the speaker resides. — Michael Ossipoff
I am only saying that, as we are not in dynamic contact with them, they are epistemologically irrelevant.
…whatever that means. Their “existence” as systems of inter-referring abstract implications is uncontroversial. They’re relevant because we live in one of them. — Michael Ossipoff
By your definition, then, hypothetical physical worlds are real, because their constituent things act on eachother — Michael Ossipoff
That’s circular. It assumes that your experience-story itself isn’t an abstract logical system. — Michael Ossipoff
That hardly can be given as a reason to say that it’s more than a hypothetical story about you and your surroundings’ interaction with you. — Michael Ossipoff
Of course they can. They can and do act on other hypotheticals, — Michael Ossipoff
”Do you believe in unparsimonious brute-facts and unverfiable, unfalsifiable propositions?” — Michael Ossipoff
.
No.
Good. Then you don’t believe in an “objectively existent” (as opposed to hypothetical) physical world whose existence you can’t explain, and whose more-than-hypothetical “reality” and “objective physical existence” you can’t define. — Michael Ossipoff
Right at the beginning, you include assumptions such as "actual world" and "real world". What are these worlds, and where is your justification for their "real" or "actual" existence? — Pattern-chaser
But you don't know what you mean by "actual". Or, if you do know what you mean by it, you're keeping it to yourself. — Michael Ossipoff
"Fact" is often or usually defined as a relation among things, or as a state-of-affairs. — Michael Ossipoff
in what regard, in what manner, do you think this physical world is different from merely the setting for your hypothetical life-experience-story, consisting of a hypothetical logical system such as I've described? — Michael Ossipoff
Saying that something is metaphysically possible just is to say that it isn't inconsistent with the way things can be in accordance with the constitutive rules that govern how those things fall under concepts. (For instance, it is a constitutive rule of bishops, in chess, that such pieces only moves legally along diagonals; and it is a constitutive rule of the concept of a human being that it is an animal). — Pierre-Normand
I think it can be shown that if "A" and "B" are meant to function in the way ordinary proper names are used, and they both actually name the same individual, then it is metaphysically necessary that A and B are numerically identical. — Pierre-Normand
Kripke would readily agree that the statement "Hesperus is Phosphorus" expresses a contingent identity in the case where "Hesperus" and "Phosphorus" are shorthand expressions for definite descriptions that merely happen to have the same reference in the actual world. — Pierre-Normand
It was that, and hence my response regarding how you do not have direct epistemic access. If this access isn't infallible then there's no particularly superior access to your purported knowledge of the actual world over what is possible. — MindForged
Do you ever stick to what you say or do you change it on a dime when an objection surfaces? Here's what you said before:
Yes, I used "possible" -- not essentially, but to avoid circumlocution. So, here's the same definition restated: "P is possible with respect to a set of facts, S, if P does not contradict the propositions expressing S." — MindForged
The reason why you required infallibility (whether you acknowledge it or not) is because your initial claim in the OP was this:
First, it is unnecessary. As we can have no epistemic access to any world but our own, actual world, anything we can learn, we can learn from the real world. — MindForged
My point was that we don't have any better epistemic access to the actual world because of the limitations of perception. Without infallible means of accessing the states of affairs of the actual world, what we perceive to be the case can easily fail to be so. Whatever you mean by "direct access" is completely opaque, and so recourse to reliability here is equally so — MindForged
Possible worlds as a means to give semantics for possibility is not circular. The only way you could claim that is because the word "possible" is part of the name of the concept. — MindForged
P is possible if there is at least one world in which P is the case — MindForged
Possible worlds are not (unless you're David Lewis) being posited as literal other worlds in the same sense as the actual world. It's right there in the name, there's only one actual world. Venus in another possible world is still Venus as it might have been, the individuation conditions return the same object (that's why the names are a rigid designator). — MindForged
Venus in another possible world is still Venus as it might have been, the individuation conditions return the same object (that's why the names are a rigid designator). — MindForged
"Second planet" and "morning/evening stars" are not proper names. — MindForged
the identity holds across worlds (i.e. trans-world identity) because they have the same essential properties which make it Venus. — MindForged
You are under the impression that a rigid designator is a term that could not have meant anything other than what it actually means. — Snakes Alive
It depends on how you define "same". Lewis's suggestion was that "same" doesn't meaningfully apply to someone or something in a different possibility world, It's a different world, necessarily with different (even if identical) things. — Michael Ossipoff
Which child, if either, am I in each world? Is it simply a matter of stipulation? Do we simply say that I’m one or the other (or neither)? — Michael
You believe in an un-acknowledged and unsupported assumption that the physical world that we live in is the "actual", "existent", "physical" and "real" one, in some (unspecified) sense in which the infinitely-many other possibility-worlds aren't. — Michael Ossipoff
there's no reasons to claim that they're "real" or "existent", whatever that would mean. — Michael Ossipoff
There's no reason to believe that your experience is other than such an abstract logical system. — Michael Ossipoff
If you claim that this physical world is more than the setting for the hypothetical logical system that is your experience-story, then in what respect to you think that this physical world is more than that. — Michael Ossipoff
Do you believe in unparsimonious brute-facts and unverfiable, unfalsifiable propositions? — Michael Ossipoff
speaking of worlds as simply "possible" allows one to confuse logical, physical and ontological possibility. — Dfpolis
...distinctions whose advocates can't specify what they mean by them — Michael Ossipoff
"P is possible with respect to a set of facts, S, if P does not contradict the propositions expressing S." — Dfpolis
This is all consistent with Kripke's claim that proper names function as rigid designators, and also with his claim that statements of identity of the form "A is B", where "A" and "B" are proper names, are metaphysically necessary. — Pierre-Normand
That's not what I said. I said that perception is not identical to reality, which is what you said. — MindForged
We don't even have direct access to our own world, so are we able to learn anything about the actual world? — MindForged
A consistent "set of facts" is one way of articulating what a possible world is so I don't even know what you think you're arguing against at this point. — MindForged
Naturally "reliable" is doing all the work here, being used to obfuscate the fact that there's no guarantee that perception maps to reality such that we can have an infallible means by which to say some experience is reliable. It's like you've never considered any objection to your views ever. — MindForged
Necessity is indeed defined as truth in all possible world [of the set of world being quantified over], and yes X being necessary entails that it's negation is not possible. Where is the circularity? — MindForged
it's nonsense to say that "Venus" names the same object in every possible world because Venus does not exist in every possible world. — Dfpolis
This is exactly what I was talking about, you don't understand this topic. — MindForged
But that's not how proper names work, they pick out a specific object in the actual world, and the meaning of that name is fixed in modal logic — MindForged
Obviously "Hesperus=Phosporus" isn't true in the possible worlds where the references to the terms do not exist. — MindForged
Your objection seems to rely on analyzing "Hesperus" and "Phosphorus" as definite descriptions rather than proper names. — Pierre-Normand
how does Kripke know what "Hesperus" and "Phosphorus" mean in any possible world? As their meaning is conventional, the denizens of each possible world might use them to designate other objects or not use them at all. Kripke has no way of knowing. So, when Kripke says they designate the same object in every possible world in which the object exists, he means he has decided to use the terms in this universal way. So, there is no fact of the matter beyond Kripke choice of naming conventions. Thus, all Kripke has done is define his conclusion into existence: the claim "'Hesperus is Phosphorus' is metaphysically necessary" has no factual basis beyond Kripke's choice of naming conventions. — Dfpolis
which would have told you that this purported objection is misguided:
Or, how anyone can know what "Hesperus" and "Phosphorus" mean to the denizens of a possible world. — Snakes Alive
Possible worlds are pieces of a technical apparatus that allow a model-theoretic interpretation of a language with modal operators. They have no metaphysical or ontological import in of themselves – only a supplementary theory as to what they are intended to model can provide this — Snakes Alive
There's no need for possible worlds in that interpretation. I can't personally see any value in the possible worlds paradigm. — andrewk
Well the value is giving real, rigorous definitions of these notions that allows us to be confident in using them in theorization. — MindForged
Dfpolis: you can stop writing paragraphs and paragraphs of text. Read my previous posts – you're uninformed about this matter. Read up on it. — Snakes Alive
There's no possible way to justify this, you only have access to your perceptions. — MindForged
The world of perception is not identical to the world itself. — MindForged
Possible world's really just a tool to explain set of concepts. — MindForged
I do not define "possible" in terms of worlds. P is possible if P does not contradict the set of propositions which it is possible with respect to.
That isn't an explanatory definition at all. You just defined possibility and used possibility within the definition. — MindForged
It means the same thing if I define that way. — MindForged
The issue is you getting hung up on the word possible appearing in the name of the concept. — MindForged
The criterion of consistency doesn't favor your definition at all because it was a circular definition. — MindForged
Lack of parsimony as compared to what? — MindForged
Not only are the usual definitions of the various modalities almost exactly as you defined them in your post — MindForged
No intelligible property? Seriously? So taking a particular path in the sky, being the second planet from the Sun, having a particular level of brightness, having a certain atmospheric composition (etc) are unintelligible properties? The whole point is that we are talking about worlds in which Venus (and the solar system) exists and that the identity statement "Hesperus is Phosphorus" is therefore necessarily true because they pick out the same object *in worlds where the relevant objects exist*. So when you say things like this: — MindForged
I can only conclude you don't know what a rigid designator is beyond reading the introductory sentence on the SEP — MindForged
Hesperus = Phosphorus’ is necessarily true if true at all because ‘Hesperus’ and ‘Phosphorus’ are proper names for the same object. Like other names, Kripke maintains, they are rigid: each designates just the object it actually designates in all possible worlds in which that object exists, and it designates nothing else in any possible world. — SEP
There's is no world where the planet Venus and our solar system exists like ours and in which "Hesperus is Phosphorus" is false. — MindForged
We don't even have direct access to our own world, so are we able to learn anything about the actual world? — MindForged
Yes modal semantics are used to define modal terms like "possibility" and "necessity" and the like. That doesn't mean you cannot understand what possible worlds are, they are part of how you define the terms. How does this even follow? I could just call them "alternate world" and use the same definitions of these terms, so surely the argument isn't that the world "possible" is used to refer to these. — MindForged
Then just stipulate what type of possibility intended. This doesn't seem like a real worry. — MindForged
If possible worlds talk is nonsense, then rigid designators are undefined.
Um, didn't the SEP define it in your quote? — MindForged
A rigid designator designates the same object in all possible worlds in which that object exists and never designates anything else. This technical concept in the philosophy of language has critical consequences felt throughout philosophy. In their fullest generality, the consequences are metaphysical and epistemological. Whether a statement's designators are rigid or non-rigid may determine whether it is necessarily true, necessarily false, or contingent. — Joseph LaPorte
However we wish to categorize the matter, even in reality there is a difference between subject perceptions of the world, and subject-generated experiences independent of perception. Dreams exist in the real world, but they are still different from perception. — Marchesk
Linguistic competence exhibited by tool design and fire use. — Galuchat