display all the ideas for this combination of texts
4 ideas
15009 | We must distinguish 'concrete' from 'abstract' and necessary states of affairs. [Sider] |
Full Idea: The truthmaker theorist's 'concrete' states of affairs must be distinguished from necessarily existing 'abstract' states of affairs. | |
From: Theodore Sider (Writing the Book of the World [2011], 08.4) | |
A reaction: [He cites Plantinga's 'Nature of Necessity' for the second one; I presume the first one is Armstrong] |
10747 | Accepting properties by ontological commitment tells you very little about them [Oliver] |
Full Idea: The route to the existence of properties via ontological commitment provides little information about what properties are like. | |
From: Alex Oliver (The Metaphysics of Properties [1996], §22) | |
A reaction: NIce point, and rather important, I would say. I could hardly be committed to something for the sole reason that I had expressed a statement which contained an ontological commitment. Start from the reason for making the statement. |
10748 | Reference is not the only way for a predicate to have ontological commitment [Oliver] |
Full Idea: For a predicate to have a referential function is one way, but not the only way, to harbour ontological commitment. | |
From: Alex Oliver (The Metaphysics of Properties [1996], §22) | |
A reaction: Presumably the main idea is that the predicate makes some important contribution to a sentence which is held to be true. Maybe reference is achieved by the whole sentence, rather than by one bit of it. |
14983 | Accept the ontology of your best theory - and also that it carves nature at the joints [Sider] |
Full Idea: We can add to the Quinean advice to believe the ontology of your best theory that you should also regard the ideology of your best theory as carving at the joints. | |
From: Theodore Sider (Writing the Book of the World [2011], 02.3) | |
A reaction: I've never liked the original Quinean formulation, but this is much better. I just take my ontological commitments to reside in me, not in whatever theory I am currently employing. I may be dubious about my own theory. |