Persistence and modality

It seems plausible to say that what changes an entity can or cannot survive depends on its persistence conditions, and that these depend, in turn, on its sortal kind. It might seem to follow that an entity cannot belong to two sortal kinds with potentially conflicting persistence conditions. Notorio...

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Main Author: Mackie, Penelope
Format: Article
Published: Springer 2018
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51061/
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author Mackie, Penelope
author_facet Mackie, Penelope
author_sort Mackie, Penelope
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
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description It seems plausible to say that what changes an entity can or cannot survive depends on its persistence conditions, and that these depend, in turn, on its sortal kind. It might seem to follow that an entity cannot belong to two sortal kinds with potentially conflicting persistence conditions. Notoriously, though, this conclusion is denied by ‘contingent identity’ theorists, who hold, for example, that a permanently coincident statue and piece of clay are identical, although the persistence conditions associated with the kinds statue and piece of clay are potentially conflicting. A clash with Leibniz’s Law is avoided by treating modal predicates as what Harold Noonan has called ‘Abelardian predicates’, as in the version of ‘inconstant’ counterpart theory developed by David Lewis. In addition to other difficulties, however, there is a question whether this ‘Abelardian’ theory does justice to the intuitions expressed in such statements as that the piece of clay could, while the statue could not, have survived a radical reshaping of its matter. I present an argument, which I call ‘the vacuous satisfaction argument’, for the conclusion that the theory does indeed fail to capture the significance of such de re modal statements.
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spelling nottingham-510612020-05-04T19:36:18Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51061/ Persistence and modality Mackie, Penelope It seems plausible to say that what changes an entity can or cannot survive depends on its persistence conditions, and that these depend, in turn, on its sortal kind. It might seem to follow that an entity cannot belong to two sortal kinds with potentially conflicting persistence conditions. Notoriously, though, this conclusion is denied by ‘contingent identity’ theorists, who hold, for example, that a permanently coincident statue and piece of clay are identical, although the persistence conditions associated with the kinds statue and piece of clay are potentially conflicting. A clash with Leibniz’s Law is avoided by treating modal predicates as what Harold Noonan has called ‘Abelardian predicates’, as in the version of ‘inconstant’ counterpart theory developed by David Lewis. In addition to other difficulties, however, there is a question whether this ‘Abelardian’ theory does justice to the intuitions expressed in such statements as that the piece of clay could, while the statue could not, have survived a radical reshaping of its matter. I present an argument, which I call ‘the vacuous satisfaction argument’, for the conclusion that the theory does indeed fail to capture the significance of such de re modal statements. Springer 2018-05-14 Article PeerReviewed Mackie, Penelope (2018) Persistence and modality. Synthese . ISSN 1573-0964 https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs11229-018-1776-x doi:10.1007/s11229-018-1776-x doi:10.1007/s11229-018-1776-x
spellingShingle Mackie, Penelope
Persistence and modality
title Persistence and modality
title_full Persistence and modality
title_fullStr Persistence and modality
title_full_unstemmed Persistence and modality
title_short Persistence and modality
title_sort persistence and modality
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51061/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51061/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51061/