As regards contingent identity statements, such as "Hesperus is Phosphorus", from Hume's principle of constant conjunction, we logically infer that Hesperus is Phosphorus, and therefore is logically contingent rather than logically necessary. — RussellA
The term "synthetic a priori" should be understood as an idiomatic expression rather than as a literal guide to Kant's doctrine of "transcendental idealism". — RussellA
Could you elaborate? — Shawn
That's the pull of the argument attributed to David Wiggins. — Banno
Every day we make choices where seemingly we could have done something otherwise. — Shawn
Even taking your argument to the extreme, there could be a possible world where causality would have allowed for a different event cone to allow a counterfactual to arise. — Shawn
But a world with a different outcome of a quantum measurement would be a different world, with a different identity, than our world. — litewave
And I cannot be in both worlds, if by "I" we understand someone who is conscious of being only in one world. The "I" in the different world would be my copy, a counterpart. — litewave
...de re modality... — Shawn
Yes, a world which is called a possible world ... — Shawn
We learn empirically that Hesperus is Phosphorus. This couldn't be so if those two words were descriptions. — frank
The discussion on p.164 is to the effect that if we can have necessary properties for individuals then (1) must hold; that (1) says the same as that F(x), even if F is (x)(x=x).
So that page is mostly a justification for the soundness of the argument (1-4). — Banno
That's what I would call a category mistake.Kripke wants to unite the contingent with identity... — Mww
No, in Identity and Necessity — Banno
The discussion on p.164 is to the effect that if we can have necessary properties for individuals then (1) must hold; that (1) says the same as that F(x), even if F is (x)(x=x). — Banno
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