That's a different question. A possible world comes about as the result of a "what if..."; then we can see if that "what if..." leads to a consistent story or not. If it is inconsistent, then there can be no such possible world.
That is, logic gives us a grammar with which to judge our statements. — Banno
I won't talk about it anymore here to avoid derailing the thread. — Amalac
If we found a situation in which there was an apparent contradiction, what we would do is to re-think how we set out contradictions. Consider "It is both a wave and a particle"; the prima facie contradiction dissolves in the mathematics. Is Pluto both a planet and not a planet?It is not the case that the sun both was and was not a star, at the same time and in the same sense ” doesn't seem to be merely a truth about “grammar”, but also about the world, — Amalac
"It is both a wave and a particle"; — Banno
A world = a sub-domain? — bongo fury
So, W1 = some world (among others) whose domain is {egg, bacon}? — bongo fury
. I think this because logic is about what we can say, and not about the way things are — Banno
So worlds are not in general to be identified by their domain? — bongo fury
I don't think you even need S5 for it? Given that you can choose world elements.
W1={egg, bacon}
W2={egg}
The statement E: "At least one entity in this world is an egg" — fdrake
Would you please tell me in what book or article I can read the stipulation of semantics for quantified modal logic you use? — TonesInDeepFreeze
So, W1 = some world (among others) whose domain is {egg, bacon}?
— bongo fury
Yes. — fdrake
Set of all possible worlds there is:
{W1, W2}
W1 is {egg, bacon}
W2 is {egg} — fdrake
So {e b} and {e} are domains. So W1 and W2 are domains. But you say that W1 and W2 are worlds. As far as I can tell, that is conflating 'world' with 'domain for a world'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You know, like in the movie trailer when the voiceover guy says, "In a world [he says the word 'world' in that overly dramatic way] where salamanders are smarter than humans ...", the world is not just the humans and salamanders and all the other objects, but also the facts about them. — TonesInDeepFreeze
in discussions about existence in worlds, I think there could be a lot riding on which of those two contexts we are in, so we should be clear as to which of the two we mean. — TonesInDeepFreeze
When we have seen that a tree is a beech, we do not need to look again in order to ascertain whether it is also not a beech; thought alone makes us know that this is impossible. But the conclusion that the law of contradiction is a law of thought is nevertheless erroneous. What we believe, when we believe the law of contradiction, is not that the mind is so made that it must believe the law of contradiction. This belief is a subsequent result of psychological reflection, which presupposes the belief in the law of contradiction. The belief in the law of contradiction is a belief about things, not only about thoughts. It is not, e.g., the belief that if we think a certain tree is a beech, we cannot at the same time think that it is not a beech; it is the belief that if the tree is a beech, it cannot at the same time be not a beech. Thus the law of contradiction is about things, and not merely about thoughts; and although belief in the law of contradiction is a thought, the law of contradiction itself is not a thought, but a fact concerning the things in the world. If this, which we believe when we believe the law of contradiction, were not true of the things in the world, the fact that we were compelled to think it true would not save the law of contradiction from being false; and this shows that the law is not a law of thought. — Russell
Imagine a world at which God exists, this world has a domain, and one of the entities in that domain is God. The phrase "God exists" is true in this world, but what set is that existential quantifier quantifying over? — fdrake
"There exists at least one God" — fdrake
But perhaps the best way to proceed would be for you to set out exactly what you think Russell's argument is in the piece you quote; because I don't see an argument there — Banno
But it's just blindingly obvious, is it not? — Amalac
all proofs assume the Law — Amalac
it itself cannot be proven — Amalac
Perhaps it would help to think of it like this: Russell supposes that either the law of noncontradiction is a fact int he world or a figment of language. — Banno
The belief in the law of contradiction is a belief about things, not only about thoughts. — Russell
Even as Amalac is both a word and you. — Banno
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