For example, if a coin lands on heads in a coin flip, I might say, “For all I know, it is possible that the coin could have landed on heads,” but it would be a mistake to suppose that that is the reality of the situation. Probabilities, after all, are measurements of our own ignorance. I mean, if I knew how the coin would be affected by physical laws throughout the flip, I would contend instead that the coin must have landed on tails. But since I am ignorant of precisely how each flip will occur, I classify the event as a contingency in my mind.
Are you assuming determinism here? Because, for example, if our free will is one factor in the outcome, then you would have to agree that the outcome is a contingency through and through.
But even if you assume determinism (and maybe you’re not), necessity and contingency still apply in other ways (unless someone can correct me).
For example, you could say that the result of this particular coin-toss
is contingent upon such-and-such conditions. Right? Whether something is necessarily going to happen via inevitable deterministic fate or not, that something doesn’t cause itself to happen by itself but only because of something else … because it is
contingent upon something else, as we say.
Also, even if determinism is true, necessity and contingency definitely apply in
general statements. For example, I can say, “A coin toss could land on tails” and this is true in reality, not just in our heads. I’m not referring to any particular coin toss in the past, present, or even future … I’m speaking generally. To deny the general statement that “A coin toss could land on tails” … then what do you replace it with and still maintain a general statement? Do you say, “A coin toss
will land on tails” or “A coin toss will
not land on tails.” (no, because that depends on particular conditions and on some tosses it’ll be true and other it won’t). But we know that the general statement “A coin toss could land on tails” is true and that it
reflects reality and is
not based on our ignorance because we have seen that sometimes the coin toss does, in fact, land on tails.
Or are you against general statements in some way?
In short, for any future event used in an argument under modal logic, we are making huge assumptions about the nature of the event. It is true that if something is not possibly the case, it is necessarily not the case, and we can symbolize that logically. But we have no way of knowing which events are “necessarily not the case.”
Could one day someone invent a square circle because metaphysical laws are capricious? Also, we know past events and can therefore use the idea of necessity to talk about them. So there are at least some things we know that are necessarily the case and as well as not the case too.
Certainly. I would posit two sorts which I feel are necessary to explain my experiences: physical and conceptual.
Not bad.
By “item” I mean “entity” or even “thing.” I would define such terms as “compilations of qualities/properties/characteristics.” For my convenience, I’ll just say they consist of qualities, and you may substitute “qualities” for any synonym you prefer.
Interesting. Forgive me, but this definition may run into problems if you do the logic.
Would you say, since “things” are “compilations of qualities,” that qualities are
not things? Or would you say that qualities* are* things, and that qualities are thus compilations of other qualities? And perhaps, then, things are compilations of things? Right?
This is somewhat important because if you don’t think a “quality” is a thing (but merely “that which defines a thing” or something) then qualities don’t exist. That is because you said that only “things” exist. And if “things” are compilations of non-existence, then it would seem things don’t exist either.
On the other hand, if qualities ARE things, then you simply have “things are compilations of other things.” They would have to be infinitely subdivided because we can’t get to a thing that is NOT a compilation of other things, because then that thing wouldn’t fulfill the definition of what a thing is.
So do you agree that “a thing is a compilation of infinitely subdivided other things”? Or would you change the definition slightly?
Assuming that we agree on this definition of “thing,” we can propose a rule: contradictory qualities may not coexist (as Aristotle would call it, the Law of Noncontradiction). This effectively disqualifies “squared circles” as things, because squareness and circularity are contradictory in that they cannot compose the same thing.
As I stated earlier, I consider concepts to have existence (under the broadest notion of “existence”), and so I would say that unicorns exist conceptually. I suppose I would say that anything logically possible exists in some way, i.e., if it consists of qualities that do not contradict each other, it exists.
… Nothingness is devoid of qualities by definition. It serves only as a mental construct. Now I guess you could say that nothingness has the quality of lacking qualities, but this is a meaningless assessment, wouldn’t you agree?
Your reasoning is not too bad, and I would completely agree with you fully if you qualified a few things. Don’t square circles exist conceptually in some way? Also, if “nothing” is a mental construct, doesn’t that exist conceptually in some way too?
I’m not so certain. Existence only seems to be hotly debated in theological matters.
Well, it’s pretty important in epistemology too.