So now you allow for necessary truths that could have been otherwise. That's not what a necessary truth is.
— Banno
That's what you think. — Metaphysician Undercover
Not if p(x)⊃□p(x), which is what you claimed at the start. :roll:..all things are contingent... — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, hence my whole point that the water goes before the 'water'.* Without some contact with water the sign 'water' has nothing to signify. — Leontiskos
If I've understood you, you are saying that water is around before we learn about it. Yep.
What I've suggested is that learning what water is and learning to wash, cook drink and talk about water are the same.
That suggestion does not rely on water not being around until we learn to wash, drink and talk about it.
I hope that's clear. — Banno
Me? Never! :lol:...you want to take issue with the Aristotelian approach... — Leontiskos
But now we can entertain the idea that the OG is a designer with free will, which is something the OP points to. — A Christian Philosophy
We'll have to disagree here.The problem here is that it commits you to the idea that dogs and ducks understand water, when in fact they don't. — Leontiskos
That's a somewhat ableist misinterpretation.Walker Percy's study of Helen Keller vis-a-vis his own deaf daughter bears out the fact that Helen's understanding of water was not present until she was seven years old—long after she had been interacting with water. — Leontiskos
Because you sad as much.Why do you think I deny that? — Metaphysician Undercover
You have proposed a system. We've been pointing out that the consequences of that system.I haven't proposed a system. I'm just pointing out potential problems of application and interpretation of modal logic. — Metaphysician Undercover
YetEverything which has reached the present and is progressing into the past is necessarily the case. — Metaphysician Undercover
So now you allow for necessary truths that could have been otherwise. That's not what a necessary truth is."X could have been otherwise", and "X is necessarily true" are not inconsistent. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'd caution agains attempting to show that there is an inconsistency in Meta's logic. He may simple add ad hoc hypotheses in order to escape. — Banno
John Searle says, “I take it to be an analytic truth about language that whatever can be meant can be said.” — Richard B
Events in the past are not necessarily true. They still might have been otherwise. You might not have written the thread to which this is a response, for example. It makes sense to discuss such possibilities, and to make inferences about them. So if you had not written that post, I would not be writing this reply. That's a sound argument. The sort of sound argument that your system denies.I don't think I agree with this. The nature o time explains both, why things could have been otherwise, and also why whatever is, is necessarily the case. Everything which has reached the present and is progressing into the past is necessarily the case. The past cannot be changed. However, the future is full of possibility, so there was the possibility that before the last bit of time passed, different possibilities could have been actualized, therefore things could have been otherwise. — Metaphysician Undercover
For someone who argues that formalisms are merely tools selected for based on usefulness, you sure do like to appeal to them a lot as sources of authority and arbiters of metaphysics a lot though. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I stand by that, and the rest, even if you pull funny faces at me.The suggestion that formal logic is restricted to analytic philosophy is demonstrably ridiculous
Here's the thing. Supose I come across the One True Explanation of Everything, and I convince everyone else that I'm right - after all, if it is the One True Explanation of Everything, I am right.I assume the unstated premises here are that the "One True Explanation of Everything" isn't really true and is only not criticized out of force, otherwise, it sounds like a world that would be immeasurably better—a world free from error and ignorance and in harmony. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I think the reason Analytic philosophy likes "possible worlds" is because its reified formalism is logically manipulable in a very straightforward way. — Leontiskos
Sometimes I think that all of this resembles the functioning of road rules. They are somewhat arbitrary, but they work if applied consistently and are understood by the community of road users. They change over time, as situations change. They are an ongoing conversation. We seek to avoid accidents and death and aim to get to places efficiently and the road rules facilitate this, but none of this means the road rules have a transcendent origin. Nor can they be explained away as subjective and therefore lacking in utility. — Tom Storm
Yeah. But perhaps what we can agree on is that there are ambiguities in asking "what if water had none of the characteristics it actually has?" that need ironing out in order to understand what is being asked.
Yep. That's what I'm after.Maybe the right way to say it is, There is no Truly True answer to the question of what is Really Real! — J
Not likely.I imagine you’re unlikely to be a Rorty fan — Tom Storm
I rather think his influence will outweigh your heart beat.I like my chances against Rorty since I still have a heart beat — Count Timothy von Icarus
Sometimes it is better to go with a clear stipulation than to muddle around in ambiguity.Yes, that the one sentence explanation of essences you've offered is metaphysically insubstantial — Count Timothy von Icarus
No — Relativist
Here the principle of noncontradiction is being used as a wedge. But making use of non-contradiction is already presuming one logical system over others. Non-contradiction does not apply, or is used quite differently, in paraconsistent logic, relevance logic, intuitionistic logic and quantum logic, for starters. Perhps your argument holds, and if we presume PNC then there must be One True Explanation Of Everything (the caps are indicative of a proper name - that this is an individual). But to presume only classical logic is to beg the question. It is to presume what is being doubted. As is the shallow response seen before - I thin form Leon rather than you - that these are not real logics; it presumes what is at questions - that there is only one real logic.So if "One Truth" (I guess I will start capitalizing it too) is "unhelpful," does that mean we affirm mutually contradictory truths based on what is "useful" at the time? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Quite so. And this is an excellent reason to keep a close eye on those power relations, and to foster the sort of society in which "might makes right" is counterbalanced by other voices, by compassion, humility, and fallibilism. You know, those basic liberal virtues. How much worse would a world be in which only the One True Explanation Of Everything was acceptable, uncriticised?As I mentioned earlier, a difficulty with social "usefulness" being the ground of truth is that usefulness is itself shaped by current power relations. — Count Timothy von Icarus
2. The Problems of Metaphysics: the “Old” Metaphysics
2.1 Being As Such, First Causes, Unchanging Things
2.2 Categories of Being and Universals
2.3 Substance
3. The Problems of Metaphysics: the “New” Metaphysics
3.1 Modality
3.2 Space and Time
3.3 Persistence and Constitution
3.4 Causation, Freedom and Determinism
3.5 The Mental and Physical
3.6 Social Metaphysics
can you sketch-out --- informally --- what "formalized" Modal Logic has to do with Platonic Forms — Gnomon
You introduce "autonomous" and "dependent". Perhaps we can get more clarity by sticking to truth functional operatives.1. An OG exists autonomously. This means without dependencies of any kind (causal or otherwise). If it had such a dependency it could not be the OG — Relativist
2. For an object, X, to be ontologically contingent, there must be some C that accounts for X, but C could have accounted for ~X. Example: assume quantum collapse is not determinate, and C is a quantum collapse in which X emerged. X is contingent because C could have collapsed to Y. I express this as:
C accounts for (X or Y), or more generally: C accounts for (X or ~X). — Relativist
Take care here. Contingency is not the same as possibility. An object that is not contingent may also be impossible.3. If an object is not contingent (as identified in #2) then it is necessary. — Relativist
Here we run into the problem of what it is for A to cause B. IF it's just A⊃B, then all sorts of things we would not usually call causes will count as causes. So "cause " is not often understood as "implies".4. Compare this to the outcome of a deterministic law of nature: the law: C causes X. Because it's deterministic, it means: C necessarily causes X. If C is contingent, then there X inherits this contingency (whatever accounts for the contingency of C, also accounts for the contingency of X). — Relativist
But that doesn't matter, since you assumed that OG is necessary at step one.5. An OG is not contingent because there is no C that accounts for the OC (that would entail a dependency - see#1). Therefore it exists necessarily. — Relativist
No. But I did.I didn't say 'we' — Wayfarer
it still leaves me wondering whether we can coherently say something is water in some logically possible world if we were to remove its defining characteristics. — Janus
Or, a philosophical perspective that you can't fathom. — Wayfarer
