Necessary factual truth:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Lanham [u.a.]
Univ. Press of America
2001
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Teilw. zugl.: Diss., 1994 u.d.T.: Browne, Gregory M.: Four dichotomies of truth |
Beschreibung: | XXII, 388 S. |
ISBN: | 0761818863 |
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adam_text | NECESSARY FACTUAL
TRUTH
Gregory M Browne
University Press of America,® Inc
Lanham • New York • Oxford
- it
CONTENTS
Preface xix
Acknowledgements xxi
PART ONE:
THE OPPOSING VIEWS
L INTRODUCTION I
H THE PRINCIPAL GROUNDS FOR THE DENIAL OF
NECESSARY FACTUAL TRUTHS 21
A DICHOTOMISM 22
B UNDERLYING PREMISES 23
C EVOLUTION OF THESE VIEWS 30
PART TWO:
BACKGROUND
m PRELIMINARIES: TERMS, REFERENCES,
CONCEPTS, MEANINGS, AND DECLARATIVES 49
A TERMS 50
B REFERRING, REFERENTS AND REFERENCES 51
C CONCEPTS 51
D MEANINGS 52
1 INTRODUCTION TO EXTENSIONS AND
INTENSIONS 52
2 EXTENSIONS FURTHER CONSIDERED 52
3 INTENSIONS FURTHER CONSIDERED 52
4 DESCRIPTIONS 54
5 WHAT MEANINGS ARE 54
6 INTRODUCTION TO DEFINITIONS 55
E DECLARATIVES 57
1 GENERAL REMARKS 57
2 CONDITIONALS 58
IV CATEGORIES AND CLASSES 61
A CATEGORIES 61
1 GENERAL REMARKS 61
2 SOME SPECIAL CONSIDERATIONS REGARDING
ATTRIBUTES 63
a An objection to attributes 63
b Complex attributes and attributes of attributes 63
B INDIVIDUALS AND CLASSES 64
1 GENERAL REMARKS 64
2 PERSISTANCE OF AN INDIVIDUAL THROUGH
CHANGE 64
C INDIVIDUAL ATTRIBUTES 65
D GENERAL ATTRIBUTES, AND RESEMBLANCE 66
1 INTRODUCTION 66
2 RESEMBLANCE 66
a General remarks 66
b All resemblances as reducible to resemblances of
attributes 67
c Resemblance and distinguishing types of attribute 70
3 ARMSTRONG S OBJECTION TO TROPES AND MY
REPLY 71
4 HOW MUCH OF THE DOCTRINE IS NECESSARY
FOR MY CONCLUSIONS 72
E INDIVIDUAL OR GENERAL ATTRIBUTES OF
INDIVIDUALS 72
1 INDIVIDUALS INTENSIONS 72
2 PECULIAR ATTRIBUTES OF INDIVIDUALS 73
F COMMON ATTRIBUTES OF CLASSES 73
1 INTRODUCTION 73
2 CLASSES INTENSIONS 74
3 COMMON AND PECULIAR ATTRIBUTES OF
CLASSES 74
4 UNIVERSAL AND PARTICULAR PREDICATION 74
G COMMON ATTRIBUTES OF
INDIVIDUALS-AS-CLASSES 75
1 INTRODUCTION 75
2 INTENSIONS OF INDIVIDUALS-AS-CLASSES 75
H INTENSIONAL DEFINITIONS AND DESCRIPTIONS 75
1 INTRODUCTION 75
2 TYPES OF INTENSIONAL DEFINITIONS OF
INDIVIDUALS AND CLASSES 76
3 COMPLETENESS OF DESCRIPTIONS OF
INDIVIDUALS AND CLASSES 78
4 DEFINITIONS BY PECULIAR ATTRIBUTES 79
a Definitions by peculiar attributes and common and
peculiar attributes 79
b Definitions by contextually peculiar attributes 80
c Adequacy 80
d Examples of definitions of individuals, and of
individuals-as-classes, by at least contextually peculiar
attributes 82
e Examples of definitions of classes by at least
contextually common and peculiar attributes 82
f Definitions of classes by fundamentally common and
jointly peculiar attributes 84
V NECESSITY 89
A POSSIBLE WORLDS TALK 90
1 POSSIBLE-WORLDS TALK AS FIGURATIVE 90
2 WORLDBOUND AND TRANSWORLD INDIVIDUALS
AND CLASSES 91
3 TRANSWORLD-TALK AS FIGURATIVE: NECESSITY
AND CONDITIONALS 92
B MODALITIES
1 THE MODALITIES AT THE ACTUAL WORLD
a General remarks
b Changing individuals at the actual world
(1) Introduction
(2) Necessitarian objections
(3) Persisting attributes of world-bound individuals
as necessary
2 MODALITIES ACROSS WORLDS
a Transworld individuals as classes extending to other
possible worlds
b The alethic modalities applied transworld to
individuals
(1) Future modalities
(2) The non-actual past and present
C NECESSARY ATTRIBUTES OF CLASSES AND OF
INDIVIDUALS-AS-CLASSES 106
D ESSENCES 106
1 INTRODUCTION 106
2 AN OBJECTION TO INDIVIDUAL ESSENCES 108
E DEFINITIONS BY NECESSARY ATTRIBUTES 109
1 INTRODUCTION 109
2 DEFINITIONS BY NECESSARY AND PECULIAR
ATTRIBUTES AND DEFINITIONS BY NECESSARY
AND SUFFICIENT ATTRIBUTES (ESSENTIAL
DEFINITIONS) 110
F NECESSARY TRUTH 114
1 INTRODUCTION 114
2 THREE KINDS OF NECESSARY TRUTH 114
3 THE NECESSITY OF NECESSARY CONDITIONALS 116
G CLASSES OF TRANSWORLD INDIVIDUALS WITH
MORE THAN ONE MEMBER 118
VI NARROW CLASSES AND WIDE CLASSES (KINDS) 123
A NARROW CLASSES AND WIDE CLASSES (KINDS): A
CHARACTERIZATION OF THE DIFFERENCE 123
1 INTRODUCTION 123
2 A FURTHER PROPERTY OF KINDS 123
3 DETERMINATION OF THE BOUNDARIES OF
KINDS 126
a General remarks 126
b Connections to other distinctions 127
c Specifying and ascertaining the boundaries 127
4 AN OBJECTION AND AN AMENDED
CHARACTERIZATION 128
B NON-ACTUAL MEMBERS OF KINDS AND
CONDrnONALITY 129
1 NON-ACTUAL MEMBERS OF KINDS AS EXISTING 129
2 CONDITIONALITY AND KINDS 129
3 TALKING OF NON-ACTUAL POSSIBLES AS
ACTUAL MEMBERS OF KINDS 130
C THE EXISTENCE OF KINDS 131
D NECESSARY QUALITIES AND NECESSARY
MEMBERSHIP 132
1 NECESSARY MEMBERSHIP IN CLASSES 132
2 NECESSARY QUALITIES OF KINDS 132
a My argument 133
b Objections 134
c Lawlike v accidental generalizations 137
E INTENSIONS AND ESSENCES OF NARROW CLASSES
AND KINDS 141
F DEFINITIONS OF NARROW CLASSES AND KINDS 143
G APPLICATION TO UNIVERSAL GENERALIZATION IN
MODERN LOGIC 146
VIL CAUSALITY 151
A INTRODUCTION 151
B THE SPECTRUM OF VIEWS 153
C NECESSARY CAUSAL RELATIONS 154
D MY CASE 154
E AN OBJECTION 155
F CAUSAL TENDENCY 156
G A FURTHER POINT 156
PART THREE:
THE NECESSITY OF FACTUAL TRUTHS ABOUT
DEEP KINDS, NARROW CLASSES AND INDIVIDUALS
Vffl DEPTH AND SHALLOWNESS 159
A DEPTH OF INDIVIDUALS 161
B DEPTHS OF CLASSES 161
C DEEP AND SHALLOW KINDS: WHAT THEY ARE 164
1 PRELIMINARIES 165
a Definitions 165
b Names and descriptions 168
2 DEEP V SHALLOW KINDS 169
3 PARADIGM SETS 173
a Introduction 173
b The question as to which qualities are included in
the essence of a Deep Kind 174
4 DEEP KINDS IN PARTICULAR: SUMMARY OF MY
THEORY SO FAR 176
5 NARROW CLASSES, DEEP KINDS, AND SHALLOW
KINDS 178
D DEEP AND SHALLOW KINDS: THE CASE FOR DEEP
KINDS 179
1 PREMILINARY ARGUMENTS AND OVERVIEW 179
2 THAT THERE ARE DEEP KINDS 180
3 WE CAN AND DO REFER TO DEEP KINDS 181
a How we can know Deep Kinds: the answer to
Locke s Problem 182
b That the alleged Deep Kind terms really are Deep
Kind terms 184
(1) General remarks 184
(2) A concession 187
c That we have already been referring to such kinds 188
4 CONCLUSIONS REGARDING DEFINITIONS AND
DESCRIPTIONS 188
5 THE COGNITIVE AND LINGUISTIC DIVISIONS OF
LABOR 190
6 THAT MY DOCTRINE OF PARADIGMS IS
CORRECT 190
E THE NATURALNESS OF KIND-CONCEPTS 193
F PROBLEMS WITH THE DISTINCTION 195
1 ARTIFACTUAL KINDS AS SHALLOW KINDS 195
2 WHICH KINDS ARE DEEP, AND WHICH ARE
DEEPEST 197
3 THE PROBLEM OF THE OBJECTIVITY AND
DICHOTOMOUS NATURE OF DEPTH 198
4 THE PROBLEM OF REDUCIBILrrY 200
5 BIOLOGICAL KINDS 202
a The depth of Linnaean taxa 202
b Dupre s objection to Putnam 206
c Parts of organisms and other biological kinds 209
6 DOUBTFULLY DEEP KINDS 210
7 KINDS PARASITIC ON OTHER KINDS 210
G SCIENTIFIC THEORIES AS CONTAINING DEEP KIND
TRUTHS 211
H CONSEQUENCES FOR DICHOTOMIES OF TRUTH 212
EX A COMPARISON OF MY THEORY TO OTHER THEORIES
HAVING IMPLICATIONS FOR DEEP KINDS 221
A THE PROBLEM OF RIGID DESIGNATORS 223
B THE NEED FOR DESCRIPTIONS AND ESSENTIALISM
1 THAT THE CAUSAL THEORY NEEDS TO BE
SUPPLEMENTED WITH ESSENTIALISM IN THE
CASE OF DEEP KINDS 226
2 THAT THE CAUSAL THEORY NEEDS TO BE
SUPPLEMENTED WITH ESSENTIALISM EVEN
IN THE CASE OF INDIVIDUALS 229
C WHAT IS NOT IMPLIED BY MY VERSION OF
ESSENTIALISM 230
1 ONLY ONE RIGHT CLASSIFICATION 231
2 FUNDAMENTAL QUALITIES AS FEW AND
HIDDEN 234
3 THE APPEARANCE/ESSENCE DISTINCTION: THE
ALLEGED CONTINGENCY OR UNCERTAINTY OF
THE PHENOMENAL QUALITIES 236
a Introduction 236
b The alleged possibility that the phenomenal qualities
are contingent 238
c The alleged possibility that the phenomenal qualities
are uncertain 239
4 A PRIVILEGED ROLE FOR SCIENTISTS 240
D THE THEORETICAL NETWORK THEORY 244
1 THAT ESSENTIALISM AND THE CAUSAL THEORY
DO NOT REQUIRE SUPPLEMENTING BY THE
THEORETICAL NETWORK THEORY 244
a That Essentialism does not require the Network
Theory 244
b That the Causal Theory does not require the Network
Theory 248
(1) The case of most Deep Kinds 248
(2) The case of individuals 248
2 ESSENTIALISM, THE NETWORK THEORY, AND THE
DISTINCTION BETWEEN DEEP KINDS AND SHALLOW
KINDS 250
PART FOUR:
THE FACTUALITY OF NECESSARY TRUTHS
ABOUT SHALLOW KINDS
X INTRODUCTION TO NECESSARY TRUTHS ABOUT
SHALLOW KINDS 261
A SHALLOW KINDS AND THE PREMISES 264
B MY PRELIMINARY ARGUMENT FOR THE
FACTUALITY OF ALL TRUTHS 265
XL AGAINST MENTALISTIC AND LINGUISTIC
INTERPRETATIONS OF SHALLOW KIND TRUTHS 269
A WHETHER SHALLOW KIND TRUTHS ARE MENTAL
OR LINGUISTIC ENTITIES 269
1 WHETHER CONCEPTS AND DEFINITIONS ARE
MENTAL OR LINGUISTIC ENTITIES 270
2 WHETHER SHALLOW KIND TRUTHS ARE
MENTAL OR LINGUISTIC ENTITIES ANYWAY 271
B SHALLOW KINDS TRUTHS AS NOT ABOUT MENTAL
R LINGUISTIC ENTITIES 272
1 WHETHER CONCEPTS AND DEFINITIONS ARE
MENTAL OR LINGWSTIC ENTITIES 273
2 SHALLOW KIND TRUTHS AS NOT ABOUT
MENTAL OR LINGUISTIC ENTITIES 273
a Conceptual and definitional truths as not about
mental or linguistic entities 273
(1) Why some people have thought that some truths
are about mental entities, and why they are wrong 275
(2) Why people have thought that some truths are
about linguistic entities, and why they are wrong 275
(3) My first general argument 276
(4) Whether definitional truths are disguised
statements about language, and the internal/external
distinction 276
b Logic as not about mental or linguistic entities 279
c De dicto and de re necessity 279
3 INCONCEIVABILITY AND NECESSITY 282
C SHALLOW KIND TRUTHS AS NOT ARBITRARY 283
1 WHAT IS ARBITRARY ABOUT CONCEPTS,
DEFINITIONS, REFERENCES, AND INTENSIONS 284
a Individuation 285
b Individuals and Narrow Classes 286
c Shallow Kinds 287
d Deep Kinds 289
e Remarks on classification 289
(1) Correctness and incorrectness of classifications 292
(2) Goodness and badness of classifications 294
f Our choice of terms 295
2 SHALLOW KIND TRUTHS AS NOT ARBITRARY
ANYWAY 295
a Conceptual and definitional truths as not arbitrary:
definitions as declaratives v definitions as assignments 296
b Logic as arbitrary 301
(1) That once a logic is chosen, logical truths are
not arbitrary 302
(2) That choice in logic is not unlimited 302
ON OTHER GROUNDS FOR BELIEVING IN THE
NON-FACTUALITY OF SHALLOW KIND TRUTHS 311
A THAT SOME TRUTHS ARE TOO GENERAL TO HAVE
CONTENT 312
B THAT SOME TRUTHS ARE PURELY FORMAL 313
C THE CONFUSION BETWEEN VACUOUSNESS AND
TRIVIALITY 314
XHL ON OTHER GROUNDS FOR BELIEVING IN THE
NON-FACTUALITY OF NECESSARY TRUTHS 317
A THAT SOME TRUTHS ARE NON-FACTUAL BECAUSE
THEY ARE TRUE NO MATTER HOW THE WORLD IS 318
B THE CONFUSION BETWEEN FACTUALrTY AND
EXISTENTIALITY 321
XIV THE NECESSITY OF SHALLOW KIND TRUTHS 323
A THE CLAIM 323
B MY OBJECTION 324
C CONCLUSION 330
PART FIVE:
THE NECESSITY OF FACTUAL TRUTHS
ABOUT SHALLOW KINDS
XV THE NECESSITY OF NEWTON S THREE AXIOMS
OF MOTION 333
A MY POSITION AND ARGUMENTS FOR IT
1 INTRODUCTION
2 SOME PROPOSED ESSENTIAL QUALITIES OF
BODIES
3 MY PROPOSED ESSENTIAL QUALITIES OF
BODIES
a Impenetrability
b Inertness
c Force in general and inertial force
(1) Inertial resistance
(2) Force
(3) Inertial force
(4) Non-inertial forces
(5) Further attributes of inertial force
4 SUMMARY OF THE ESSENTIAL ATTRIBUTES OF
BODIES
5 BODY AND BODIES
6 DISTINCTIVE QUALITIES OF BODIES
7 THE DERIVATION OF NEWTON S AXIOMS FROM
THE ESSENTIAL QUALITIES OF BODIES 354
a The First Axiom 355
b The Second Axiom 355
c The Third Axiom 354
8 APPLICATION TO THE CASE OF THE BILLIARD
BALLS 366
B OBJECTIONS 367
1 OBJECTION: THIS IS NOT WHAT BODY MEANS
OR WHAT THE ESSENCE OF BODY IS: I AM JUST
MAKING UP THE DEFINITION 367
2 IF THE LAWS ARE NECESSARY THEY MUST BE
NON-FACTUAL 369
3 OBJECTION: RELATIVITY THEORY AND
QUANTUM PHYSICS SHOW NEWTON S AXIOM TO
BE NOT TRUE 369
4 OTHER OBJECTIONS 373
C CONCLUSIONS 375
INDEX 381
|
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institution | BVB |
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spelling | Browne, Gregory M. Verfasser aut Necessary factual truth Gregory M. Browne Four dichotomies of truth Lanham [u.a.] Univ. Press of America 2001 XXII, 388 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Teilw. zugl.: Diss., 1994 u.d.T.: Browne, Gregory M.: Four dichotomies of truth Truth Wahrheit (DE-588)4064314-1 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4113937-9 Hochschulschrift gnd-content Wahrheit (DE-588)4064314-1 s DE-604 HEBIS Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009271017&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Browne, Gregory M. Necessary factual truth Truth Wahrheit (DE-588)4064314-1 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4064314-1 (DE-588)4113937-9 |
title | Necessary factual truth |
title_alt | Four dichotomies of truth |
title_auth | Necessary factual truth |
title_exact_search | Necessary factual truth |
title_full | Necessary factual truth Gregory M. Browne |
title_fullStr | Necessary factual truth Gregory M. Browne |
title_full_unstemmed | Necessary factual truth Gregory M. Browne |
title_short | Necessary factual truth |
title_sort | necessary factual truth |
topic | Truth Wahrheit (DE-588)4064314-1 gnd |
topic_facet | Truth Wahrheit Hochschulschrift |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009271017&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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