more on this theme     |     more from this thinker


Single Idea 16459

[filed under theme 7. Existence / D. Theories of Reality / 10. Vagueness / b. Vagueness of reality ]

Full Idea

Maybe the world is vague, and vagueness is a necessary feature of any true description of it. Also identities may lack a determinate truth value because of their vagueness. Hence it is a fact that some objects have fuzzy boundaries. But is this coherent?

Gist of Idea

Is it coherent that reality is vague, identities can be vague, and objects can have fuzzy boundaries?

Source

Gareth Evans (Can there be Vague Objects? [1978])

Book Ref

Evans,Gareth: 'Collected Papers' [OUP 1985], p.176


A Reaction

[compressed] Lewis quotes this introduction to the famous short paper, to show that Evans wasn't proposing a poor argument, but offering a reductio of the view that vagueness is 'ontic', or a feature of the world.

Related Idea

Idea 16458 Semantic vagueness involves alternative and equal precisifications of the language [Lewis]


The 6 ideas from 'Can there be Vague Objects?'

Evans argues (falsely!) that a contradiction follows from treating objects as vague [Evans, by Lowe]
Is it coherent that reality is vague, identities can be vague, and objects can have fuzzy boundaries? [Evans]
There clearly are vague identity statements, and Evans's argument has a false conclusion [Evans, by Lewis]
Evans assumes there can be vague identity statements, and that his proof cannot be right [Evans, by Lewis]
If a=b is indeterminate, then a=/=b, and so there cannot be indeterminate identity [Evans, by Thomasson]
There can't be vague identity; a and b must differ, since a, unlike b, is only vaguely the same as b [Evans, by PG]