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Armstrong,

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Armstrong, The Nature of Possibility ... And individuals will have spatial and temporal parts. ... states of affairs are at the bedrock of our ontology. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Armstrong,


1
Armstrong, The Nature of Possibility
  • Armstrong advocates a combinatorial theory of
    possibility a combination of given, actual,
    elements.
  • What does that mean? There are things in this
    world with their properties, and we generate a
    possible world by combining given, known,
    properties in different ways.
  • This view also appeals to Wittgensteins
    Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus.

2
  • Naturalism and Realism
  • My central metaphysical hypothesis is that all
    there is, is the world of space and time. It is
    this world which is to supply the actual elements
    for the totality of combinations. So what is
    proposed is a naturalistic form of a
    combinatorial theory. (184a)
  • Naturalism the space-time world is all there
    is. (186b)

3
  • For Armstrong, the world contains
  • Individuals a, b, And individuals will have
    spatial and temporal parts. (To be an individual,
    a thing must fall under a concept. (185b))
  • Properties F, G, These are simple
    properties, to be conceived of as universals.
    I.e. a property may be possessed by more than one
    individual.
  • Relations R, S, Like properties they are
    universals.
  • What universals there are is to be determined a
    posteriori by natural science.
  • States of affairs (or facts) According to
    Armstrong the existence of individual a and
    property F does not suffice to show that a is F.
    Rather, as being F is a state of affairs.

4
An argument for states of affairs
  1. If something is to be an individual, then it must
    be one thing.
  2. But, to be one thing, it must fall under a
    concept.
  3. For something to fall under a concept is for it
    to have a predicate or property or stand in
    relation to some other thing or property. (I.e.,
    one must be able to formulate the proposition, a
    is F)
  4. For any proposition, there must be some state of
    affairs that is its truth-maker.
  5. Therefore, states of affairs are at the bedrock
    of our ontology.

5
Wittgenstein worlds
  • Take an individual a and two properties F and G.
    There are two statements a is F and a is G.
    The former is true i.e., there is a state of
    affairs that is the truth-maker of that
    proposition. But a is G has the same form as
    the atomic proposition a is F. Therefore, it
    describes a (merely) possible state of affairs.
  • But note this cant be so simple. Mustnt we
    also say that F and G have to be properties of
    some appropriate kind? E.g., let a ball, F
    red, and G B-flat Major. So the ball is red
    and the ball is (in) B-flat Major are
    comparable propositions and the latter is
    (merely) possible?

6
Haecceities and Quiddities
  • Consider the following states of affairs
  • Fa Gb
  • Ga Fb
  • Fa Ga Fb
  • Fa Fb Gb
  • Fa Ga Gb
  • Ga Fb Gb
  • Fa Ga Fb Gb
  • Are I and II, III and IV, V and VI the same
    worlds?

7
  • The haecceitist holds that these sets of worlds
    differ the anti-haecceitist denies it.
  • Strong and weak anti-haecceitism a strong
    anti-haecceitism denies that individuals are
    anything more than the bundles of their
    properties. (p. 59) For the strong
    anti-haecceitist world VII collapses into a one
    individual world. The weak anti-haecceitist does
    not collapse world VII into the single individual
    world.
  • Armstrong rejects strong anti-haecceitism, says
    choice is between weak anti-haecceitism and
    haecceitism.
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