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Full Idea
There are two fundamental ways in which a property may be metaphysically necessary: it may be a worldly necessity, true whatever the circumstances; or it may be a transcendent necessity, true regardless of the circumstances.
Gist of Idea
Metaphysical necessity may be 'whatever the circumstance', or 'regardless of circumstances'
Source
Kit Fine (Intro to 'Modality and Tense' [2005], p.10)
Book Ref
Fine,Kit: 'Modality and Tense' [OUP 2005], p.10
A Reaction
[See Fine's 'Necessity and Non-Existence' for further details] The distinction seems to be that the first sort needs some circumstances (e.g. a physical world?), whereas the second sort doesn't (logical relations?). He also applies it to existence.
9200 | Empiricists suspect modal notions: either it happens or it doesn't; it is just regularities. [Fine,K] |
9202 | Objects, as well as sentences, can have logical form [Fine,K] |
9205 | The three basic types of necessity are metaphysical, natural and normative [Fine,K] |
9206 | We must distinguish between the identity or essence of an object, and its necessary features [Fine,K] |
9208 | Philosophers with a new concept are like children with a new toy [Fine,K] |
9209 | Metaphysical necessity may be 'whatever the circumstance', or 'regardless of circumstances' [Fine,K] |
9207 | If sentence content is all worlds where it is true, all necessary truths have the same content! [Fine,K] |
9210 | Possible objects are abstract; actual concrete objects are possible; so abstract/concrete are compatible [Fine,K] |
9211 | A non-standard realism, with no privileged standpoint, might challenge its absoluteness or coherence [Fine,K] |