R
raikou
Guest
Oooh. So you mean to say there are three definitions crucial here:But multiple universes are entirely extraneous to this sort of argument. I’ve bolded the important premise: that God is possible because his existence is consistent. If that premise is true*, then there is no reason to aver to multiple universes. The nature of possibility is such that, if it is possible that a necessary being exists, then that necessary being exists. It doesn’t have to exist in some concrete universe or other.
Again, the difference between multiple universes and possible worlds is important. There is not an accepted interpretation of possible worlds semantics. Plantinga takes a Platonist interpretation (possible worlds “exist” in an abstract Platonic “third realm”, while our world is the actual world). David Lewis is famous for his modal realism, in that he thought that each possible world was an actual, concrete universe, and that all possibilities are actual. Most contemporary philosophers, I think, would accept neither of them. A multiple universe hypothesis is not necessarily like either of those. One could take it that way, but just because there are infinite universes doesn’t mean, for instance, that all possibilities are actualized (ie. there doesn’t have to be an alternate universe in which yesterday you joined the circus, although there might be a “possible world” in which that occurred).
*This is the question, though. A lot of philosophical arguments are based on the idea that consistent conceivability implies possibility. (For example, arguments for substance dualism based on the separability of the mind and the body.) But generally such a principle needs restrictions.
I think that in many cases our modal intuitions are simply not up to par, and we do not know enough about the “overflow necessities” of our language. A couple examples for the former and the latter:
a). Consider the laws of physics and of nature. We lack a completed physics, so we do not know how they all tie together, if they do, and in what way. We don’t know which of them could have been different (although we might have some ideas, in some places). We don’t know what would account for their being different, either. So can I say that there is a possible world with some different physical constants? I don’t know. Maybe.
b). Rubies are made of aluminum oxide. We have not known this forever. At times, rubies have been confused with other semiprecious gems like topaz. What we have meant by the word ruby was a substance made of aluminum oxide. But we did not have a sufficient theory of chemistry to realize that until recently. That rubies are a variety of aluminum oxide has always been a “necessity” (in the logical sense) that “overflowed” our linguistic usage of the term. If someone said, “In some possible world, rubies are made of quartz” the statement would have been false, although it did not entail a known contradiction.
I think these are good reasons for modal conservatism.
- necessary - something that ought to exist always
- possible - something that would have existed at some point
- consistently conceivable - something that may exist because it has no inherent contradictions (ex. Not a “square circle”)