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Full Idea
The converse Barcan is at least plausible, since its denial says there is something that could fail to meet a condition when everything met that condition; but how could everything meet that condition if that thing did not?
Gist of Idea
Converse Barcan: could something fail to meet a condition, if everything meets that condition?
Source
Timothy Williamson (Truthmakers and Converse Barcan Formula [1999], §3)
Book Ref
-: 'Dialectica' [-], p.264
A Reaction
Presumably the response involves a discussion of domains, since everything in a given domain might meet a condition, but something in a different domain might fail it.
Related Ideas
Idea 15132 The Barcan formulas fail in models with varying domains [Kripke, by Williamson]
Idea 15135 If the domain of propositional quantification is constant, the Barcan formulas hold [Williamson]
15131 | If metaphysical possibility is not a contingent matter, then S5 seems to suit it best [Williamson] |
15133 | A thing can't be the only necessary existent, because its singleton set would be as well [Williamson] |
15134 | The truthmaker principle requires some specific named thing to make the difference [Williamson] |
15135 | If the domain of propositional quantification is constant, the Barcan formulas hold [Williamson] |
15138 | Not all quantification is objectual or substitutional [Williamson] |
15136 | Substitutional quantification is metaphysical neutral, and equivalent to a disjunction of instances [Williamson] |
15137 | If 'fact' is a noun, can we name the fact that dogs bark 'Mary'? [Williamson] |
15142 | Our ability to count objects across possibilities favours the Barcan formulas [Williamson] |
15139 | Converse Barcan: could something fail to meet a condition, if everything meets that condition? [Williamson] |
15141 | Truthmaker is incompatible with modal semantics of varying domains [Williamson] |
15140 | The converse Barcan formula will not allow contingent truths to have truthmakers [Williamson] |
18492 | Not all quantification is either objectual or substitutional [Williamson] |