Title: What is a dispositional masker
1- What is a dispositional masker?
- A critique of
- Manley and Wasserman
- Sungho Choi
- Kyung Hee University
2The simple conditional analysis of dispositions
- SCA. N is disposed to M when C iff N would M if
C - The stimulating circumstance and manifestation
of a disposition
3The problem of maskers
- A disposition can be masked in such a way
that it is not manifested even when the
appropriate stimulus conditions are present and
the causal basis remains intact - MWs case of masking If a fragile glass were
dropped, a sorcerer would step in and alter the
extrinsic features of the environment of the
glass, say, change the solid floor below into
fluffy mattresses thereby the glass would not
break - SCA tells us that the glass is not disposed to
break when dropped
4The strategy of getting specific
- Whilst it appears that the sentence The glass
is disposed to break when dropped attributes a
simple disposition whose stimulating circumstance
is one where the glass is dropped and its
manifestation is the event of breaking, it
actually attributes a more specific disposition
D which is explicitly attributed by SD - SD. x is disposed to break when dropped
without maskers like the sorcerer on Earth from
one metre up onto a solid surface with a Shore
durometre measurement of 90A, through a substance
with a density of 1.2 kg/m3 lets call the
dispositional property D - The glass would break if dropped without the
sorcerer on Earth from one metre up and so on
5The case of one millimetre up
- The glass is dropped from one millimetre up and
so it does not break - No masking happens in cases where the
disposition is not manifested because the
appropriate stimulus conditions are not present - The glass does not break simply because the
appropriate stimulus conditions for D are not
present - In resemblance with the case where the
nail-polish, which is not water-soluble but
acetone-soluble, does not dissolve when it is put
into water
6The case of one metre up
- A sorcerer is eager to protect the glass. The
glass is dropped from one metre up onto a hard
floor and so on but the sorcerer instantly lift
the floor to the point that is just one
millimetre down from the glass and so the glass
does not break - The glass does not break owing to the operation
of a masker, the sorcerer Masking - In resemblance with the case where the
nail-polish is put into acetone but it does not
dissolve because a sorcerer turns acetone into
water
7The conditional analysis of dispositions
- The case of one metre up is generally thought of
as a real counterexample to the simple
conditional analysis of dispositions - The case of one millimetre up is not deemed as a
real threat to the simple conditional analysis of
dispositions - Manley and Wassermans failure to distinguish
these two cases taints one of their objections to
the conditional analysis of dispositions
8Context-dependence
- The semantic value of a dispositional ascription
is at least partly determined by the context in
which the ascription is made - In the mouth of a homemaker, the television set
is not disposed to break when struck with a soft
blow - In the mouth of a construction worker, the
television set is disposed to break when struck
with a very hard blow
9The incompleteness of dispositional predicates
- Elizabeth Prior
- Dispositional predicates like is disposed to
break when struck and is fragile are
incomplete in the sense that they have more than
one argument place - The predicate is disposed to break when struck
has many hidden argument places, one of which is
to be filled with the strength of a striking
force - x is disposed to break when struck with a
particular strength at a particular angle, and so
on
10Explaining context-dependence
- The context-dependence of dispositional
ascriptions is due to the fact that the values
for the hidden argument places of a dispositional
predicate are in most cases fixed by the context
of ascription - The difference in the semantic value of the
dispositional ascription x is disposed to break
when struck between the homemaker and
construction worker
11Semantically expanded stimuli
- The semantic value of a dispositional ascription
varies from context to context - The stimulus condition of a dispositional
ascription, too, varies from context to context - We can obtain the contextually expanded stimulus
of a dispositional ascription by putting together
its first-approximation stimulus and the values
for the hidden argument places fixed by the
context of ascription - Homemaker vs. construction worker
12Characteristic stimulus
- When we take full consideration of the context
of a given dispositional ascription, we will
acquire its contextually expanded stimulus that
is maximally specific in the context of
ascription, which I call its characteristic
stimulus - The predicate is disposed to break when
dropped has many hidden argument places. - By fixing the values for more of the hidden
argument places of is disposed to break when
dropped by means of the context of ascription,
we acquire an increasingly specific stimulus, the
event of being dropped on earth from one metre up
onto a hard surface and so on
13Manley and Wassermans example
- Suppose you say, My glass is disposed to break
when dropped, so it would break if dropped. Your
friend points out that the glass is currently
being held over a soft bed, so that it would not
break if dropped. You are tempted to reply that
what you meant is that the glass is disposed to
break when dropped onto a hard surface, and that
it would break if dropped on such a surface. Your
obstinate friend then holds the glass over a hard
surface, but only a millimetre above. When you
add the requirement that it be dropped from at
least a metre up. . .
14Interpretation
- One after another hidden argument place of is
disposed to break when dropped is saturated by
the context of ascription - Your friend imagines the glasss being subject
to a stimulus that involves a different value for
one of the hidden argument places of is disposed
to break when dropped than its characteristic
stimulus - Your friend envisages the glasss being dropped
onto a soft surface, where the phrase onto a
soft surface gives a value to the hidden
argument place of is disposed to break when
dropped that is to be filled with the hardness
of the surface
15Characteristic stimulus contd
- No guarantee that the characteristic stimulus of
a dispositional ascription so characterized is
identical to the stimulating circumstance of the
precise disposition that is claimed to be
attributed by it
16Contextual contribution
- The stimulating circumstance of D is one where
x is dropped without maskers like the sorcerer on
Earth from one metre up onto a solid surface and
so on - The condition of xs being dropped on Earth from
one metre up onto a solid surface and so on stems
from the fact that the hidden argument places of
the dispositional predicate is disposed to break
when dropped are saturated by the context of
dispositional ascription
17Non-contextual semantic element
- The characteristic stimulus of the dispositional
ascription, which is maximally specific among its
contextually expanded stimuli, does not include
the condition that there are no maskers - The dispositional predicate is disposed to
break when dropped does not have a hidden
argument place that is to be filled with the
presence or absence of a masker
18The nature of dispositionality
- For every object x, it is never the case that x
is disposed to break when dropped in the presence
of a masker - When I simply say that x is disposed to M, I
typically mean that x is disposed to M when no
maskers are operative, regardless of the context
of dispositional ascription - The rationale for the condition of the absence
of a masker has to do with the context-independent
nature of dispositionality
19The distinction
- The condition that there are no maskers is
required by the context-independent meaning of a
dispositional ascription that is pertinent to the
nature of dispositionality - The condition of xs being dropped on Earth from
one metre up onto a solid surface and so on, on
the one hand, and the condition of the absence of
a masker, on the other - The distinction between the characteristic
stimulus and stimulating circumstance of a
dispositional ascription
20What is a dispositional masker?
- A masker is defined as a factor that would block
the manifestation of a disposition by foiling the
process from the stimulus even if its
characteristic stimulus obtains - Driving a wedge between cases of masking and
other cases where the disposition does not
manifest because its characteristic stimulus does
not occur
21The case of one millimetre up
- The specification of the characteristic stimulus
of x is disposed to break when dropped must
include reference to the height from which the
glass is dropped, say, the phrase from one metre
up - The condition that the glass is dropped from one
metre up - It is not a case where the glass is subject to
the characteristic stimulus of x is disposed to
break when dropped but does not break owing to
the operation of a masker - The contexts role of filling the hidden
argument places of a dispositional predicate
22The case of one metre up
- The characteristic stimulus of x is disposed to
break when dropped occurs - The glass is indeed subject to the
characteristic stimulus of x is disposed to
break when dropped but does not break owing to
the operation of a masker - Generally held to be a counterexample to the
thought that x is disposed to break when
dropped is equivalent to the counterfactual
conditional If x were subject to its
characteristic stimulus (as opposed to the
stimulating circumstance of D) it would break
23Small error?
- The case of one millimetre up is not a case of
masking - Wreaking havoc with MWs most important critique
of the conditional analysis of dispositions - The contextual and non-contextual part of
Lewiss strategy of getting specific - What is at work in averting the problem of
maskers from the conditional analysis of
dispositions?
24What is wrong?
- The structure of MWs criticism of the
conditional analysis of dispositions - The question of how to articulate the contexts
role of filling the hidden argument places of a
dispositional predicate - Achilles heels
- The non-contextual part of Lewiss strategy of
getting specific remains intact