tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-38914342185645455112025-12-18T20:23:43.235-06:00Alexander Pruss's BlogAlexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.comBlogger4547125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-85584005284762679522025-12-15T10:10:00.615-06:002025-12-15T10:10:20.420-06:00God and growing block<ol type="1"> <li><p>On the growing block theory of time, if God is in time, God grows.</p></li> <li><p>God doesn’t grow.</p></li> <li><p>So, God is not time or the growing block theory is not true.</p></li> </ol> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-68796527290028108412025-12-15T10:00:16.826-06:002025-12-15T10:00:43.355-06:00Divine timelessness<p>This is probably the simplest argument for the timelessness of God, and somehow I’ve missed out on it in the past:</p> <ol type="1"> <li><p>God does not change.</p></li> <li><p>Creation has a finite age.</p></li> <li><p>There is nothing outside of creation besides God.</p></li> <li><p>So, change has a finite age. (1–3)</p></li> <li><p>There is no time without change.</p></li> <li><p>So, time has a finite age. (4,5)</p></li> <li><p>If something is in time, it has an age which is less than or equal to the age of time.</p></li> <li><p>God does not have a finite age.</p></li> <li><p>God is not in time. (6–8)</p></li> </ol> <p>Premise (2) is supported by causal finitism and is also a part of Jewish, Christian and Muslim faith.</p> <p>Some philosophers deny (3): they think abstract things exist besides God and creation. But this theologically problematic view does not affect the argument. For abstract things are either unchanging or they change as a result of change in concrete things (for instance, a presentist will say that sets come into existence when their members do).</p> <p>The most problematic premise in my view is (5).</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-87449591332995997712025-12-12T15:45:00.002-06:002025-12-12T15:45:18.940-06:00Semi-statistical views of health<p>On a purely statistical views of health, the health of a bodily system is its functioning near the average or median. This leads to the absurd conclusions in Kurt Vonnegut’s <a href="https://www.tnellen.com/cybereng/harrison.html">“Harrison Bergeron”</a>: we should push those who are above average closer to the average.</p> <p>A better view is Bourse’s semi-statistical view on which non-statistical facts determine the direction in which functioning counts as better and the direction in which it counts as worse, and then one says that the health of the system is its functioning either better than average/median or sufficiently close to the average/median.</p> <p>The semi-statistical view has the following curious consequence. A government program to promote exercise if successful in significantly improving cardiac function in a sufficiently large number of participants and thereby raising the average/median is apt to make some non-participants who would otherwise have been marginal with respect to cardiac function fall below the norm. Thus, some non-participants are literally sickened by the program, and non-consensually so.</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-39077447949802823962025-12-11T13:34:29.475-06:002025-12-11T13:37:00.703-06:00Using general purpose LLMs to help with set theory questions<p>Are general purpose LLMs useful to figuring things out in set theory? Here is a story about two experiences I recently had. Don’t worry about the mathematical details.</p> <p>Last week I wanted to know whether one can prove a certain strengthened version of Cantor’s Theorem without using the Axiom of Choice. I asked Gemini. The results were striking. It looked like a proof, but at crucial stages degenerated into weirdness. It started the proof as a reductio, and then correctly proved a bunch of things, and then claimed that this leads to a contradiction. It then said a bunch of stuff that didn’t yield a contradiction, and then said the proof was complete. Then it said a bunch more stuff that sounded like it was kind of seeing that there was no contradiction.</p> <p>The “proof” also had a step that needed more explanation and it offered to give an explanation. When I accepted its offer it said something that sounded right, but it implicitly used the Axiom of Choice, which I expressly told it in the initial problem it wasn’t supposed to. When I called it on this, it admitted it, but defended itself by saying it was using a widely-accepted weaker version of Choice (true, but irrelevant).</p> <p>ChatGPT screwed up in a different way. Both LLMs produced something that at the local level looked like a proof, but wasn’t. I ended up <a href="https://mathoverflow.net/questions/504570/without-ac-can-there-be-a-function-with-linearly-ordered-fibers-from-the-powerse/504576#504576">asking MathOverflow</a> and getting a correct answer.</p> <p>Today, I was thinking about <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin%27s_axiom">Martin’s Axiom</a> which is something that I am very unfamiliar with. Along the way, I wanted to know if:</p> <ol type="1"> <li>There is an upper bound on the cardinality of a compact Hausdorff topological space that satisfies the countable chain condition (ccc).</li> </ol> <p>Don’t worry about what the terms mean. Gemini told me this was a “classic” question and the answer was positive. It said that the answer depended on a “deep” result of Shapirovskii from 1974 that implied that:</p> <ol start="2" type="1"> <li>Every compact Hausdorff topological space satisfying the ccc is separable.</li> </ol> <p>A warning bell that I failed to heed sufficiently was that Gemini’s exposition of Shapirovskii included the phrase “the cc(<span class="math inline"><em>X</em></span>) = cc(<span class="math inline"><em>X</em></span>) implies <span class="math inline"><em>d</em>(<em>X</em>)</span> = cc(<span class="math inline"><em>X</em></span>)”, which is not only ungrammatical (“the”?!) but has a trivial antecedent.</p> <p>I had trouble finding an etext of the Shapirovskii paper (which from the title is on a relevant topic), so I asked ChatGPT whether (2) is true. Its short answer was: “Not provable in ZFC.” It then said that the existence of a counterexample is independent of the ZFC axioms. Well, I Googled a bit more, and found that the falsity of (2) follows from the ZFC axioms given the highest-ranked answer <a href="https://mathoverflow.net/questions/78641/the-example-of-ccc-but-not-separable">here</a> as combined with the (very basic) Tychonoff theorem (I am not just relying on authority here: I can see that the example in the answer works). Thus, the “Not provable” claim was just false. I suspect that ChatGPT got its wrong answer by reading too much into a low-ranked answer on the same page (the low ranked answer gave <em>a</em> counterexample that is independent of the ZFC axioms, but did not claim that <em>all</em> counterexamples are so independent).</p> <p>A tiny bit of thought about the counterexample to (2) made it clear to me that the answer to (1) was negative.</p> <p>I then asked Gemini in a new session directly about (2). It gave essentially the same incorrect answer as ChatGPT, but with a bit more detail. Amusingly, this contradicts what Gemini said to my initial question.</p> <p>Finally, just as I was writing this up, I asked ChatGPT directly about (1). It correctly stated that the answer to (1) is negative. However, parts of its argument were incorrect—it gave an inequality (which I haven’t checked the correctness of) but then its argument relied on the opposite inequality.</p> <p>So, here’s the upshot. On my first set theoretic question, the incorrect answers of both LLMs did not help me in the least. On my second question, Gemini was wrong, but it did point me to a connection between (1) and (2) (which I should have seen myself), and further investigation led me to negative answers to both (1) and (2). Both Gemini and ChatGPT got (2) wrong. ChatGPT got the answer to (1) right (which it had a 50% chance of, I suppose) but got the argument wrong.</p> <p>Nonetheless, on my second question Gemini did actually help me, by pointing me to a connection that along with MathOverflow pointed me to the right answer. If you know what you’re doing, you can get something useful out of these tools. But it’s dangerous: you need to be able to extract kernels from truth from a mix of truth and falsity. You can’t trust anything set theoretic the LLM gives, not even if it gives a source.</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-12841574085803654822025-12-10T11:48:00.000-06:002025-12-10T11:48:01.402-06:00Plural quantification and the continuum hypothesis<p>Some people, including myself, are concerned that plural quantification may be quantification over sets in logical clothing rather than a purely logical tool <a href="https://alexanderpruss.blogspot.com/2025/04/mereology-plural-quantification-and.html">or a free lunch</a>. Here is a somewhat involved argument in this direction. The argument has analogues for mereological universalism and second-order quantification (and is indeed a variant of known arguments in the last context).</p> <p>The Continuum Hypothesis (CH) in set theory says that there is no set whose cardinality is greater than that of the integers and less than that of the real numbers. In fact, due to the work of Goedel and Cohen, we know that CH is independent of the axioms of Zermelo-Fraenkel-Choice (ZFC) set theory assuming ZFC is consistent, and indeed ZFC is consistent with a broad variety of answers to the question of how many cardinalities there are between the integers and the reals (any finite number is a possible answer, but there can even be infinitely many). While many of the other axioms of set theory sound like they might be just a matter of the logic of collections, neither CH nor its denial seems like that. Indeed, these observations may push one to think that there many different universes of sets, some with CH and others with an alternative to CH, rather than a single privileged concept of “true sets”.</p> <p>Today I want to show that plural quantification, together with some modal assumptions, allow one to state a version of CH. I think this pushes one to think analogous things about plural quantification as about sets: plural quantification is not just a matter of logic (vague as this statement might be) and there may even be a plurality of plural quantifications.</p> <p>This is well-known <a href="https://jasonturner.arizona.edu/storage/PSO-Web.pdf">given a pairing function</a>. But I won’t assume a pairing function, and instead I will do a bunch of hard work.</p> <p>The same approach will give us a version of CH in Monadic Second Order logic and in a mereology with arbitrary fusions.</p> <p>Let’s go!</p> <p>Say that a possible world <em>w</em> is admissible provided that:</p> <ol type="1"> <li><p><em>w</em> is a multiverse of universes</p></li> <li><p>for any two universes <em>u</em> and <em>v</em> and item <span class="math inline"><em>a</em></span> in <span class="math inline"><em>u</em></span>, there is a unique item <span class="math inline"><em>b</em></span> in <span class="math inline"><em>v</em></span> with the same mass as <span class="math inline"><em>a</em></span></p></li> <li><p>the items in each universe are well-ordered by mass</p></li> <li><p>for each item in each universe there is an item in the same universe with bigger mass</p></li> <li><p>for each item <em>c</em> in a universe <em>u</em> if <span class="math inline"><em>a</em></span> is not of the least mass in <span class="math inline"><em>u</em></span>, <span class="math inline"><em>a</em></span> has an immediate predecessor with respect to mass in <em>u</em>.</p></li> </ol> <p>The point of (3)–(5) is to ensure that each universe has a least-mass item and that there are only countably many items. If we assumed that masses are real numbers, we would just need (3) and (4).</p> <p>Say that pluralities of items <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span> in a universe <span class="math inline"><em>u</em></span> and <span class="math inline"><em>y</em><em>y</em></span> in a universe <span class="math inline"><em>v</em></span> of an admissible world <em>correspond</em> provided that for all natural numbers <span class="math inline"><em>i</em></span>, if <span class="math inline"><em>a</em></span> is in <span class="math inline"><em>u</em></span> and <span class="math inline"><em>b</em></span> is in <span class="math inline"><em>v</em></span> and <span class="math inline"><em>a</em></span> and <span class="math inline"><em>b</em></span> have equal mass, then <span class="math inline"><em>a</em></span> is among <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span> if and only if <span class="math inline"><em>b</em></span> is among <span class="math inline"><em>y</em><em>y</em></span>. Two individual items correspond provided that they have equal mass.</p> <p>Say that an admissible possible world <span class="math inline"><em>w</em></span> is <em>big</em> provided that:</p> <ol start="6" type="1"> <li>at <em>w</em>: there is a plurality <em>x</em><em>x</em> of items such that (a) for any universe <em>u</em> and any plurality <em>y</em><em>y</em> of items in <em>u</em>, there is a universe <em>v</em> such that the subplurality of items from <em>x</em><em>x</em> that are in <em>v</em> corresponds to <span class="math inline"><em>y</em><em>y</em></span> and (b) there are no distinct universes <em>u</em> and <span class="math inline"><em>v</em></span> each with an item in common with <em>x</em><em>x</em> such that the subpluralities of <em>x</em><em>x</em> consisting of items in <em>u</em> and <em>v</em>, respectively, correspond to each other.</li> </ol> <p>The bigness condition ensures that we have at least continuum-many universes.</p> <p>Say that the <em>head</em> of a universe <span class="math inline"><em>u</em></span> is the item <span class="math inline"><em>u</em></span> in the universe that has least mass. Say that two items are neighbors provided that they are in the same universe. We can identify universes with their heads.</p> <p>Say that a plurality <span class="math inline"><em>h</em><em>h</em></span> of heads of universes is <em>countable</em> provided that:</p> <ul> <li>There is a plurality <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span> of items such that each of the <em>h</em><em>h</em> has exactly one neighbor among the <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span> and no two items of <em>x</em><em>x</em> correspond.</li> </ul> <p>The plurality <em>x</em><em>x</em> defines a mapping of each head in <span class="math inline"><em>h</em><em>h</em></span> to one of its neighbors, and the above condition ensures each distinct pair of heads is mapped to non-corresponding neighbors, and that ensures there are countably many <em>h</em><em>h</em>.</p> <p>Say that a plurality <span class="math inline"><em>h</em><em>h</em></span> of heads of universes is <em>continuum-sized</em> provided that:</p> <ul> <li>There is a plurality <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span> of items such that each head <em>z</em> among the <span class="math inline"><em>h</em><em>h</em></span> has a neighbor among the <em>x</em><em>x</em>, and for any universe <em>u</em> and any plurality <em>y</em><em>y</em> of the items of <em>u</em>, there is a unique head <em>z</em> among the <span class="math inline"><em>h</em><em>h</em></span> such that the plurality of its neighbors corresponds to <span class="math inline"><em>z</em></span>.</li> </ul> <p>The plurality <em>x</em><em>x</em> basically defines a bijection between <span class="math inline"><em>h</em><em>h</em></span> and the subpluralities of any fixed universe.</p> <p>Given pluralities <span class="math inline"><em>g</em><em>g</em></span> and <span class="math inline"><em>h</em><em>h</em></span> of heads of universes, say pluralities <em>x</em><em>x</em> and <em>y</em><em>y</em> of items define a <em>mapping</em> from <span class="math inline"><em>g</em><em>g</em></span> to <span class="math inline"><em>h</em><em>h</em></span> provided that:</p> <ul> <li>There are pluralities <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span> and <span class="math inline"><em>y</em><em>y</em></span> of items such that for each item <em>a</em> from <span class="math inline"><em>g</em><em>g</em></span>, if <span class="math inline"><em>u</em><em>u</em></span> is the plurality of <em>a</em>’s neighbors among the <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span>, then there is a unique item <em>b</em> among the <span class="math inline"><em>h</em><em>h</em></span> such that the plurality <em>v</em><em>v</em> of <span class="math inline"><em>b</em></span>’s neighbors among the <span class="math inline"><em>y</em><em>y</em></span> corresponds to <span class="math inline"><em>u</em><em>u</em></span>.</li> </ul> <p>If <em>a</em> and <span class="math inline"><em>b</em></span> are as above, we say that <span class="math inline"><em>b</em></span> is the <em>value</em> of <span class="math inline"><em>a</em></span> under the mapping defined by <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span> and <span class="math inline"><em>y</em><em>y</em></span>. Here’s how this works: <em>x</em><em>x</em> defines a map of heads in <em>g</em><em>g</em> to pluralities of their respective neighbors and <span class="math inline"><em>y</em><em>y</em></span> defines a map of some of the heads in <em>h</em><em>h</em> to pluralities of their respective neighbors, and then the <em>correspondence</em> relation can be used to match up heads in <span class="math inline"><em>g</em><em>g</em></span> with heads in <span class="math inline"><em>h</em><em>h</em></span>.</p> <p>We now say that the mapping defined by <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span> and <span class="math inline"><em>y</em><em>y</em></span> is <em>injective</em> provided that distinct items in <span class="math inline"><em>g</em><em>g</em></span> never have the same value under the mapping. (This is only going to be possible if <span class="math inline"><em>g</em><em>g</em></span> is continuum-sized.)</p> <p>If there are <em>x</em><em>x</em> and <em>y</em><em>y</em> that define an injective mapping from <span class="math inline"><em>g</em><em>g</em></span> to <span class="math inline"><em>h</em><em>h</em></span>, then we say that <span class="math inline">|<em>g</em><em>g</em>| ≤ |<em>h</em><em>h</em>|</span>. If we have <span class="math inline">|<em>g</em><em>g</em>| ≤ |<em>h</em><em>h</em>|</span> but not <span class="math inline">|<em>h</em><em>h</em>| ≤ |<em>g</em><em>g</em>|</span>, we say that <span class="math inline">|<em>g</em><em>g</em>| &lt; |<em>h</em><em>h</em>|</span>.</p> <p>The rest is easy. The Continuum Hypothesis for the heads in big admissible <em>w</em> says that there aren’t pluralities of heads <span class="math inline"><em>g</em><em>g</em></span> and <span class="math inline"><em>h</em><em>h</em></span> such that <span class="math inline"><em>g</em><em>g</em></span> is not countable, <span class="math inline"><em>h</em><em>h</em></span> is continuum-sized, and <span class="math inline">|<em>g</em><em>g</em>| &lt; |<em>h</em><em>h</em>|</span>.</p> <p>We can also get analogues of the finite alternatives to the Continuum Hypothesis. For instance, an analogue to <span class="math inline">2<sup>ℵ<sub>0</sub></sup> = ℵ<sub>3</sub></span> says that there are pluralities <span class="math inline"><em>b</em><em>b</em></span>, <span class="math inline"><em>c</em><em>c</em></span> and <span class="math inline"><em>d</em><em>d</em></span> of heads such that <span class="math inline"><em>b</em><em>b</em></span> is not countable, <span class="math inline"><em>d</em><em>d</em></span> is continuum sized and <span class="math inline">|<em>b</em><em>b</em>| &lt; |<em>c</em><em>c</em>| &lt; |<em>d</em><em>d</em>|</span>, but there are not pluralities <span class="math inline"><em>a</em><em>a</em></span>, <span class="math inline"><em>b</em><em>b</em></span>, <span class="math inline"><em>c</em><em>c</em></span> and <span class="math inline"><em>d</em><em>d</em></span> with <span class="math inline"><em>a</em><em>a</em></span> not countable, <span class="math inline"><em>d</em><em>d</em></span> continuum-sized and <span class="math inline">|<em>a</em><em>a</em>| &lt; |<em>b</em><em>b</em>| &lt; |<em>c</em><em>c</em>| &lt; |<em>d</em><em>d</em></span>.</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-78539038997471460152025-12-09T17:45:17.534-06:002025-12-09T17:45:41.979-06:00Maybe we can create spacetime<p>Suppose a substantivalist view of spacetime on which points of spacetime really exist.</p> <p>Suppose I had taken a different path to my office today. Then the curvature of spacetime would have been slightly different according to General Relativity.</p> <p><strong>Question:</strong> Would spacetime have had the same points, but with different metric relations, or would spacetime have had different points with different metric relations?</p> <p>If we go for the <em>same points</em> option, then we have to say that the distance between two points is not an essential property of the two points. Moreover it then turns out that spacetime has degrees of freedom that are completely unaccounted for in General Relativity, degrees of freedom that specify ``where’’ (with respect to the metric) our world’s points of spacetime would be in counterfactual situations. This makes for a much more complicated theory.</p> <p>If we go for the <em>different points</em> option, then we have the cool capability of creating points of spacetime by waving our arms. While this is a little counterintuitive, it seems to me to be the best answer. Perhaps the best story here is that points of spacetime are individuated by the limiting metric properties of the patches of spacetime near them <em>and</em> by their causal history.</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-38627476448129523812025-12-08T13:40:13.013-06:002025-12-09T10:42:43.942-06:00Time without anything changing<p>Consider this valid argument:</p> <ol type="1"> <li><p>Something that exists only for an instant cannot undergo real change.</p></li> <li><p>Something timeless cannot undergo real change.</p></li> <li><p>There can be no change without something undergoing real change.</p></li> <li><p>There is a possible world where there is time but all entities are either timeless or momentary.</p></li> <li><p>So it is possible to have time without change.</p></li> </ol> <p>Premises 1 and 2 are obvious.</p> <p>The thought behind premise 3 is that there are two kinds of change: real change and Cambridge change. Cambridge change is when something changes in virtue of something else changing—say, a parent gets less good at chess than a child simply because the child gets really good at it. But on pain of a clearly vicious regress, Cambridge change presupposes real change.</p> <p>The world I have in mind for (4) is one where a timeless God creates a succession of temporal beings, each of which exists only for an instant.</p> <p>(I initially wanted to formulate the argument in terms of <em>intrinsic</em> rather than real change. But that would need a premise that says that there can be no change without something undergoing intrinsic change. But imagine a world with no forces where the only temporal entities are two particles eternally moving away from each other at constant velocity. They change in their distance, but they do not change intrinsically. This is not Cambridge change, for Cambridge change requires something else to have real change, and there is no other candidate for change in this world. Thus it seems that one can have real change that is wholly relational—the particles in this story are <em>really</em> changing.)</p> <p>All that said, I am not convinced by the argument, because when I think about the world of instantaneous beings, it seems obvious to me that it’s a world of change. But even though it’s a world of change, it’s not a world where any <em>thing</em> changes. (One might dispute this, saying that <em>the universe</em> exists and changes. I don’t think there is such a thing as the universe.) This suggests that what is wrong with the argument is that premise (3) is false. To <em>have change</em> in the world is not the same as for <em>something</em> to change. This is more support for my thesis that <a href="https://alexanderpruss.blogspot.com/2025/10/two-kinds-of-change.html">factual and objectual change</a> are different, and one cannot reduce the former to the latter.</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-30903330614634987222025-12-08T09:51:04.337-06:002025-12-08T09:51:34.428-06:00The last thought<p>Entertain this thought:</p> <ol type="1"> <li>There is a unique last thought that anyone ever thinks and it’s not true.</li> </ol> <p>Or, more briefly:</p> <ol start="2" type="1"> <li>The last thought is not true.</li> </ol> <p>There are, of course, possible worlds where there is no last thought, because (temporal) thoughts go on forever, and worlds where there is a tie for last thought, and worlds where the last thought is “I screwed up” and is true. But, plausibly, there are also worlds where there is a unique last thought and it’s not true—say, a world where the last thought is “I see how to defuse the bomb now.”</p> <p>In other words, (1) seems to be a perfectly fine, albeit depressing, contingent thought.</p> <p>Is there a world where (1) is the last thought? You might think so. After all, it surely could be the case that someone entertains (1) and then a bomb goes off and annihilates everyone. But supposing that (1) is the last thought in <em>w</em>, then (1) either is or is not true in <span class="math inline"><em>w</em></span>. If it is true in <span class="math inline"><em>w</em></span>, then it is not, and if it is not true, then it is true. Now that’s a paradoxical last thought!</p> <p>Over the last week, I’ve been thinking of a <a href="https://alexanderpruss.blogspot.com/2025/12/an-improved-paradox-about-thoughts-and.html">paradox</a> about thoughts and worlds, inspired by an <a href="https://andrewmbailey.com/HowToBuild.pdf">argument</a> of Rasmussen and Bailey. I eventually came to realize that the paradox (apparently unlike their argument) seems to be just a version of the Liar Paradox, essentially the one that I gave above.</p> <p>But we shouldn’t stop thinking just because we have hit upon a Liar. (You don’t want your last thought to be that you hit upon a Liar!) Let’s see what more we can say. First, the version of the Liar in (1) is the Contingent Liar: we only get paradoxicality in worlds where the last thought is (1) or something logically equivalent to (1).</p> <p>Now, consider that (1) has unproblematic truth value in our world. For in our world, there is no last thought, given eternal life. And even if there were no eternal life, and there was a last thought, likely it would be something that is straightforwardly true or false, without any paradox. Now an unproblematic thought that has truth value has a proposition as a content. Let that proposition be <span class="math inline"><em>p</em></span>. Then we can see that neither <em>p</em> nor anything logically equivalent to it can be the content of the last thought in any world.</p> <p>This is very strange. If you followed my directions, as you read this blog post, you began your reading by entertaining a thought with content <em>p</em>. It surely could have happened that at that exact time, <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span>, no one else thought anything else. But since a thought with content <span class="math inline"><em>p</em></span> cannot be the last thought, it seems that some mysterious force would be compelling people to think something after <em>t</em>. Granted, Judaism, Christianity and Islam, there is such a mysterious force, namely God: God has promised eternal life to human beings, and this eternal life is a life that includes thinking. But we could imagine someone thinking a thought with content <span class="math inline"><em>p</em></span> at a time when no one else is thinking in a world where God has made no such promises.</p> <p>So what explains the constraint that neither <span class="math inline"><em>p</em></span> nor anything logically equivalent to it can be the content of the last thought in a possible world? After all, we want to maintain some kind of a reasonable rearrangement or mosaic principle and it’s hard to think of one that would let one require that a world where a thought with content <span class="math inline"><em>p</em></span> happens at a time <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span> when no one else is thinking, then a thought must occur later. Yet classical logic requires us to say this.</p> <p>I think what we have to say is this. Take a world <span class="math inline"><em>w</em><sub>1</sub></span> without any relevant divine promises or the like, where after a number of other thoughts, Alice finally thinks a thought with content <span class="math inline"><em>p</em></span> at a time when no one else is engaging in any mental activity, and then she permanently dies at <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span> before anyone else can get to thinking anything else. Then at <span class="math inline"><em>w</em><sub>1</sub></span> there will be other thoughts after Alice’s death. Now take a world <span class="math inline"><em>w</em><sub>2</sub></span> that is intrinsically just like <em>w</em><sub>1</sub> up to and including <em>t</em>, and then there is no thought. I think it’s hard to avoid saying that worlds like <em>w</em><sub>1</sub> and <span class="math inline"><em>w</em><sub>2</sub></span> are possible. This requires us to say that at <span class="math inline"><em>w</em><sub>2</sub></span>, Alice does <em>not</em> think a thought with content <span class="math inline"><em>p</em></span> before death, even though <span class="math inline"><em>w</em><sub>2</sub></span> is intrinsically just like <em>w</em><sub>1</sub> up to and including the time of her death.</p> <p>What follows is that whether the content of Alice’s thought is <span class="math inline"><em>p</em></span> depends on what happens <em>after</em> her (permanent) death. In other words, we have a particularly controversial version of semantic externalism on which facts about the content of mental activity depend on the future, even in cases like <em>p</em> where the proposition does not depend on the identities of any objects or natural kinds other than perhaps ones (is thought a natural kind?) that have already been instantiated. Semantic externalism extends far!</p> <p>The lastness in (1) and (2) functions to pick out a unique thought in some worlds without regard for its content. There are other ways of doing so:</p> <ul> <li><p>the most commonly thought thought</p></li> <li><p>the least favorite thought of anybody</p></li> <li><p>the one and only thought that someone accepts with credence <span class="math inline"><em>π</em>/4</span>.</p></li> </ul> <p>Each of these leads to a similar argument for a very far-reaching semantic externalism.</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-69110860891572250062025-12-05T13:38:00.003-06:002025-12-05T13:39:02.717-06:00An improved paradox about thoughts and worlds<p><a href="https://alexanderpruss.blogspot.com/2025/12/thoughts-and-pluralities-of-worlds.html">Yesterday</a>, I offered a paradox about possible thoughts and pluralities of worlds. The paradox depends on a kind of recombination principle (premise (2) in the post) about the existence of thoughts, and I realized that the formulation in that post could be objected to if one has a certain combination of views including essentiality of origins and the impossibility of thinking a proposition that involves non-qualitative features (say, names or natural kinds) in a world where these features do not obtain.</p> <p>So I want to try again, and use two tricks to avoid the above problem. Furthermore, after writing up an initial draft (now deleted), I realized I don’t need pluralities at all, so it’s just a paradox about thoughts and worlds.</p> <p>The first trick is to restrict ourselves to (purely) qualitative thoughts. Technically, I will do this by supposing a relation <span class="math inline"><em>Q</em></span> such that:</p> <ol type="1"> <li>The relation <em>Q</em> is an equivalence (i.e., reflexive, symmetric, and transitive) on worlds.</li> </ol> <p>We can take this equivalence relation to be qualitative sameness or, if we don’t want to make the qualitative thought move after all, we can take <em>Q</em> to be identity. I don’t know if there are other useful choices.</p> <p>We then say that a <span class="math inline"><em>Q</em></span>-thought is a (possible) thought <em>θ</em> such that for any world there aren’t two worlds <em>w</em> and <em>w</em>′ with <span class="math inline"><em>Q</em>(<em>w</em>,<em>w</em>′)</span> such that <em>θ</em> is true at one but not the other. If <em>Q</em> is qualitative sameness, then this captures (up to intensional considerations) that <em>θ</em> is qualitative. Furthermore, we say that a <em>Q</em>-plurality is a plurality of worlds <span class="math inline"><em>w</em><em>w</em></span> such that there aren’t two <em>Q</em>-equivalent worlds one of which is in <em>w</em><em>w</em> and the other isn’t.</p> <p>The second trick is a way of distinguishing a “special” thought—up to logical equivalence—relative to a world. This is a relation <span class="math inline"><em>S</em>(<em>w</em>,<em>θ</em>)</span> satisfying these assumptions:</p> <ol start="2" type="1"> <li><p>If <span class="math inline"><em>S</em>(<em>w</em>,<em>θ</em>)</span> and <span class="math inline"><em>S</em>(<em>w</em>,<em>θ</em>′)</span> for <span class="math inline"><em>Q</em></span>-thoughts <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em></span> and <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em>′</span>, then the <span class="math inline"><em>Q</em></span>-thoughts are logically equivalent.</p></li> <li><p>For any <em>Q</em>-thought <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em></span> and world <span class="math inline"><em>w</em></span>, there is a thought <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em>′</span> logically equivalent to <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em></span> and a world <span class="math inline"><em>w</em></span> such that <span class="math inline"><em>S</em>(<em>w</em>,<em>θ</em>′)</span>.</p></li> <li><p>For any <em>Q</em>-thought <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em></span> and any <span class="math inline"><em>Q</em></span>-related worlds <span class="math inline"><em>w</em></span> and <span class="math inline"><em>w</em>′</span>, if <span class="math inline"><em>S</em>(<em>w</em>,<em>θ</em>)</span>, there is a thought <em>θ</em>′ logically equivalent to <em>θ</em> such that <span class="math inline"><em>S</em>(<em>w</em>′,<em>θ</em>′)</span>.</p></li> </ol> <p>Assumption (2) says that when a special thought exists at a world, it’s unique up to logical equivalence. Assumption (3) says that every thought is special at some world, up to logical equivalence. In the case where <em>Q</em> is identity, assumption (4) is trivial. In the case where <span class="math inline"><em>Q</em></span> is qualitative sameness, assumption (4) says that a thought’s being special is basically (i.e., up to logical equivalence) a qualitative feature.</p> <p>We get different arguments depending on what specialness is. A candidate for a specialness relation needs to be qualitative. The simplest candidate would be that <span class="math inline"><em>S</em>(<em>w</em>,<em>θ</em>)</span> iff at <em>w</em> the one and only thought that occurs is <em>θ</em>. But this would be problematic with respect (3), because one might worry that many thoughts are such that they can only occur in worlds where some other thoughts occur.</p> <p>Here are three better candidates, the first of which I used in my previous post, with the thinkers in all of them implicitly restricted to non-divine thinkers:</p> <ol type="a"> <li><p><span class="math inline"><em>S</em>(<em>w</em>,<em>θ</em>)</span> iff at <em>w</em> there is a time <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span> at which <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em></span> occurs, and no thoughts occur later than <em>t</em>, and any other thought that occurs at <em>t</em> is entailed by <em>θ</em></p></li> <li><p><span class="math inline"><em>S</em>(<em>w</em>,<em>θ</em>)</span> iff at <em>w</em> the thought <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em></span> is the favorite thought of the greatest number of thinkers up to logical equivalence (i.e., there is a cardinality <em>κ</em> such that for each of <em>κ</em> thinkers <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em></span> is the favorite thought up to logical equivalence, and there is no other thought like that)</p></li> <li><p><span class="math inline"><em>S</em>(<em>w</em>,<em>θ</em>)</span> iff at <em>w</em> the thought <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em></span> is the one and only thought that anyone thinks with credence exactly <span class="math inline"><em>π</em>/4</span>.</p></li> </ol> <p>On each of these three candidates for the specialness relation <span class="math inline"><em>S</em></span>, premises (2)–(4) are quite plausible. And it is likely that if some problem for (2)–(4) is found with a candidate specialness relation, the relation can be tweaked to avoid the relation.</p> <p>Let <em>L</em> be a first-order language with quantifiers over worlds (Latin letters) and thoughts (Greek letters), and the above predicates <span class="math inline"><em>Q</em></span> and <span class="math inline"><em>S</em></span>, as well as a <span class="math inline"><em>T</em>(<em>θ</em>,<em>w</em>)</span> predicate that says that the thought <em>θ</em> is true at <em>w</em>. We now add the following schematic assumption for any formula <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em> = <em>ϕ</em>(<em>w</em>)</span> of <span class="math inline"><em>L</em></span> with at most the one free variable <em>w</em>, where we write <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>w</em>′)</span> for the formula obtained by replacing free occurrences of <span class="math inline"><em>w</em></span> in <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em></span> with <span class="math inline"><em>w</em>′</span>:</p> <ol start="6" type="1"> <li><em>Q</em>-Thought Existence: If <span class="math inline">∀<em>w</em>∀<em>w</em>′[<em>Q</em>(<em>w</em>,<em>w</em>′)→(<em>ϕ</em>(<em>w</em>)↔︎<em>ϕ</em>(<em>w</em>′))]</span>, there is a thought <em>θ</em> such that <span class="math inline">∀<em>w</em>(<em>T</em>(<em>θ</em>,<em>w</em>)↔︎<em>ϕ</em>(<em>w</em>))</span>.</li> </ol> <p>Our argument will only need this for one particular <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em></span> (dependent on the choice of <span class="math inline"><em>Q</em></span> and <span class="math inline"><em>S</em></span>), and as a result there is a very simple way to argue for it: just <em>think</em> the thought that a world <em>w</em> such that <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>w</em>)</span> is actual. Then the thought will be actual and hence possible. (Entertaining a thought seems to be a way of thinking a thought, no?)</p> <p><strong>Fact:</strong> Premises (1)–(6) are contradictory.</p> <p>Eeek!!</p> <p>I am not sure what to deny. I suppose the best candidates for denial are (3) and (6), but both seem pretty plausible for at least some of the above choices of <em>S</em>. Or, maybe, we just need to deny the whole framework of thoughts as entities to be quantified over. Or, maybe, this is just a version of the Liar?</p> <p><strong>Proof of Fact</strong></p> <p>Let <em>ϕ</em>(<em>w</em>) say that there is a <em>Q</em>-thought <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em></span> such that <span class="math inline"><em>S</em>(<em>w</em>,<em>θ</em>)</span> and but <em>θ</em> is not true at <span class="math inline"><em>w</em></span>.</p> <p>Note that if this is so, and <span class="math inline"><em>Q</em>(<em>w</em>,<em>w</em>′)</span>, then <em>S</em>(<em>w</em>′,<em>θ</em>′) for some <em>θ</em>′ equivalent to <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em></span> by (4). Since <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em></span> is a <span class="math inline"><em>Q</em></span>-thought it is also not true at <em>w</em>′, and hence <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em>′</span> is not true at <span class="math inline"><em>w</em>′</span>, so we have <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>w</em>′)</span>.</p> <p>By <em>Q</em>-Thought Existence (6), there is a <em>Q</em>-thought that is true at all and only the worlds <span class="math inline"><em>w</em></span> such that <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>w</em>)</span> and by (3) there is a <em>Q</em>-thought <span class="math inline"><em>ρ</em></span> logically equivalent to it and a world <em>c</em> such that <span class="math inline"><em>S</em>(<em>c</em>,<em>ρ</em>)</span>. Then <span class="math inline"><em>ρ</em></span> is also true at all and only the worlds <em>w</em> such that <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>w</em>)</span>.</p> <p>Is <em>ρ</em> true at <span class="math inline"><em>c</em></span>?</p> <p>If yes, then <em>ϕ</em>(<em>c</em>). Hence there is a <em>Q</em>-thought <em>θ</em> such that <span class="math inline"><em>S</em>(<em>c</em>,<em>θ</em>)</span> but <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em></span> is not true at <span class="math inline"><em>w</em></span>. Since <span class="math inline"><em>S</em>(<em>c</em>,<em>ρ</em>)</span>, we must have <em>θ</em> and <span class="math inline"><em>ρ</em></span> equivalent by (2), so <span class="math inline"><em>ρ</em></span> is is not true at <span class="math inline"><em>c</em></span>, a contradiction.</p> <p>If not, then we do not have <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>c</em>)</span>. Since we have <span class="math inline"><em>S</em>(<em>c</em>,<em>ρ</em>)</span>, in order for <em>ϕ</em>(<em>c</em>) to fail we must have <em>ρ</em> true at <span class="math inline"><em>c</em></span>, a contradiction.</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-41251676808702496562025-12-04T15:03:00.005-06:002025-12-04T15:05:10.586-06:00Thoughts and pluralities of worlds: A paradox<p>These premises are plausible if the quantifiers over possible thoughts are restricted to possible non-divine thoughts and the quantifiers over people are restricted to non-divine thinkers:</p> <ol type="1"> <li><p>For any plurality of worlds <span class="math inline"><em>w</em><em>w</em></span>, there is a possible thought that is true in all and only the worlds in <span class="math inline"><em>w</em><em>w</em></span>.</p></li> <li><p>For any possible thought <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em></span>, there is a possible world <span class="math inline"><em>w</em></span> at which there is a time <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span> such that</p> <ol type="a"> <li>someone thinks a thought equivalent to <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em></span> at <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span>,</li> <li>any other thought that anyone thinks at <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span> is entailed by <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em></span>, and</li> <li>nobody thinks anything after <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span>.</li> </ol></li> </ol> <p>In favor of (1): Take the thought that <em>one of the worlds in <span class="math inline"><em>w</em><em>w</em></span> is actual</em>. That thought is true in all and only the worlds in <span class="math inline"><em>w</em><em>w</em></span>.</p> <p>In favor of (2): It’s initially plausible that there is a possible world <em>w</em> at which someone thinks <em>θ</em> and nothing else. But there are reasons to be worried about this intuition. First, we might worry that sometimes to think a thought requires that one have earlier thought some other thoughts that build up to it. Thus we don’t require that there is no other thinking than <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em></span> in <span class="math inline"><em>w</em></span>, but only that at a certain specified <em>t</em>—the last time at which anyone thinks anything—there is a limitation on what one thinks. Second, one might worry that by thinking a thought one also thinks its most obvious entailments. Third, Wittgensteinians may deny that there can be a world with only one thinker. Finally, we might as well allow that instead of someone thinking <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em></span> in this world, they think something equivalent. The intuitions that led us to think there is a world where the only thought is <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em></span>, once we account for these worries, lead us to (2).</p> <p>Next we need some technical assumptions:</p> <ol start="3" type="1"> <li><p>Plurality of Worlds Comprehension: If <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>w</em>)</span> is a formula true for at least one world <em>w</em>, then there is a plurality of all the worlds <span class="math inline"><em>w</em></span> such that <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>w</em>)</span>.</p></li> <li><p>There are at least two worlds.</p></li> <li><p>If two times are such that neither is later than the other, then they are the same.</p></li> </ol> <p>(It’s a bit tricky how to understand (5) in a relativistic context. We might suppose that times are maximal spacelike hypersurfaces, and a time counts as later than another provided that a part of that time is in the absolute future of a part of the other time. I don’t know how plausible the argument will then be. Or we might restrict our attention to worlds with linear time or with a reference frame that is in some way preferred.)</p> <p><strong>Fact:</strong> (1)–(5) are contradictory.</p> <p>So what should we do? I myself am inclined to deny (3), though denying (1) is also somewhat attractive.</p> <p><strong>Proof of Fact</strong></p> <p>Write <span class="math inline"><em>T</em>(<em>w</em>,<em>u</em><em>u</em>)</span> for a plurality of worlds <span class="math inline"><em>u</em><em>u</em></span> and a world <span class="math inline"><em>w</em></span> provided that for some possible thought <em>θ</em> true in all and only the worlds of <em>u</em><em>u</em> at <em>w</em> there is a time <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span> such that (a)–(c) are true.</p> <p><strong>Claim:</strong> If <span class="math inline"><em>T</em>(<em>w</em>,<em>u</em><em>u</em>)</span> and <span class="math inline"><em>T</em>(<em>w</em>,<em>v</em><em>v</em>)</span> then <span class="math inline"><em>u</em><em>u</em> = <em>v</em><em>v</em></span>.</p> <p><strong>Proof:</strong> For suppose not. Let <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em><sub>1</sub></span> be true at precisely the worlds of <em>u</em><em>u</em> and <em>θ</em><sub>2</sub> at precisely the worlds of <em>v</em><em>v</em>. Let <em>t</em><sub><em>i</em></sub> be such that at <em>t</em> conditions (a)–(c) are satisfied at <em>w</em> for <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em> = <em>θ</em><sub><em>i</em></sub></span>. Then, using (5), we get <span class="math inline"><em>t</em><sub>1</sub> = <em>t</em><sub>2</sub></span>, since by (c) there are no thoughts after <span class="math inline"><em>t</em><sub><em>i</em></sub></span> and by (a) there is a thought at <span class="math inline"><em>t</em><sub><em>i</em></sub></span> for <span class="math inline"><em>i</em> = 1, 2</span>. It follows by (b) that <em>θ</em><sub>1</sub> entails <span class="math inline"><em>θ</em><sub>2</sub></span> and conversely, so <span class="math inline"><em>u</em><em>u</em> = <em>v</em><em>v</em></span>.</p> <p>It now follows from (1) and (2) that <span class="math inline"><em>T</em></span> defines a surjection from some of the worlds to pluralities of worlds, and this violates a version of Cantor’s Theorem using (3). More precisely, let <span class="math inline"><em>C</em>(<em>w</em>)</span> say that there is a plurality <em>u</em><em>u</em> of worlds such that <span class="math inline"><em>T</em>(<em>w</em>,<em>u</em><em>u</em>)</span> and <em>w</em> is not among the <span class="math inline"><em>u</em><em>u</em></span>.</p> <p>Suppose first there is no world <span class="math inline"><em>w</em></span> such that <span class="math inline"><em>C</em>(<em>w</em>)</span>. Then for every world <em>w</em>, if <span class="math inline"><em>T</em>(<em>w</em>,<em>u</em><em>u</em>)</span> then the world <em>w</em> is among the <em>u</em><em>u</em>. But consider two worlds <em>a</em> and <span class="math inline"><em>b</em></span> by (4). Let <span class="math inline"><em>u</em><em>u</em></span>, <span class="math inline"><em>v</em><em>v</em></span> and <span class="math inline"><em>z</em><em>z</em></span> be pluralities consisting of <em>a</em>, <span class="math inline"><em>b</em></span> and both <span class="math inline"><em>a</em></span> and <span class="math inline"><em>b</em></span> respectively. We must then have <span class="math inline"><em>T</em>(<em>a</em>,<em>u</em><em>u</em>)</span>, <span class="math inline"><em>T</em>(<em>b</em>,<em>v</em><em>v</em>)</span> and either <span class="math inline"><em>T</em>(<em>a</em>,<em>z</em><em>z</em>)</span> or <span class="math inline"><em>T</em>(<em>b</em>,<em>z</em><em>z</em>)</span>—and in either case the Claim will be violated.</p> <p>So there is a world <em>w</em> such that <em>C</em>(<em>w</em>). Let the <em>u</em><em>u</em> be all the worlds <em>w</em> such that <span class="math inline"><em>C</em>(<em>w</em>)</span> (this uses (3)). By the surjectivity observation, there is a world <span class="math inline"><em>c</em></span> such that <span class="math inline"><em>T</em>(<em>c</em>,<em>u</em><em>u</em>)</span>. If <em>c</em> is among the <span class="math inline"><em>u</em><em>u</em></span>, then we cannot have <em>C</em>(<em>c</em>) since then there would be a plurality <span class="math inline"><em>v</em><em>v</em></span> of worlds such that <span class="math inline"><em>T</em>(<em>c</em>,<em>v</em><em>v</em>)</span> with <em>c</em> not among the <span class="math inline"><em>v</em><em>v</em></span>, from which we would conclude that <em>c</em> is not among the <em>u</em><em>u</em> by the Claim, a contradiction. But if <em>c</em> is not among the <em>u</em><em>u</em>, then we have <em>C</em>(<em>c</em>), and so <em>c</em> is among the <span class="math inline"><em>u</em><em>u</em></span>, a contradiction.</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-7835553873349584302025-12-04T10:52:00.001-06:002025-12-04T10:52:08.899-06:00Classical mereology and causal regresses<p>Assume classical mereology with arbitrary fusions.</p> <p>Further assume two plausible theses:</p> <ol type="1"> <li><p>If each of the <em>y</em>s is caused by at least one of the <span class="math inline"><em>x</em></span>s and there is no overlap between any of the <em>x</em>s and <span class="math inline"><em>y</em></span>s, then the fusion of the <span class="math inline"><em>y</em></span>s is caused by a part of the fusion of the <em>x</em>s.</p></li> <li><p>It is impossible to have non-overlapping objects <span class="math inline"><em>A</em></span> and <span class="math inline"><em>B</em></span> such that <span class="math inline"><em>A</em></span> is caused by a part of <span class="math inline"><em>B</em></span> and <span class="math inline"><em>B</em></span> is caused by a part of <span class="math inline"><em>A</em></span>.</p></li> </ol> <p>It follows that:</p> <ol start="3" type="1"> <li>It is impossible to have an infinite causal regress of non-overlapping items.</li> </ol> <p>For suppose that <span class="math inline"><em>A</em><sub>0</sub></span> is caused by <span class="math inline"><em>A</em><sub>−1</sub></span> which is caused by <em>A</em><sub>−2</sub> and so on. Let <em>E</em> be a fusion of the even-numbered items and <em>O</em> a fusion of the odd-numbered ones. Then by (1), a part of <span class="math inline"><em>E</em></span> causes <span class="math inline"><em>O</em></span> and a part of <span class="math inline"><em>O</em></span> causes <span class="math inline"><em>E</em></span>, contrary to (2).</p> <p>This is rather like explanatory circularity arguments I have used in the past against regresses, but it uses causation and mereology instead.</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-76493226049549316712025-12-03T14:02:00.002-06:002025-12-03T14:02:08.062-06:00Persons and temporal parts<p>On perdurantism, we are four-dimensional beings made of temporal parts, and our actions are fundamentally those of the temporal parts.</p> <p>This is troubling. Imagine a person with a large number of brains, only one of which is active at any one time, and every millisecond a new brain gets activated. There would be something troubling about the fact that we are always interacting with a different brain person, and only interacting with the person as a whole by virtue of interacting with ever different brains. And this is pretty much what happens on perdurantism.</p> <p>Maybe it’s not so bad if each brain’s data comes from the previous brain, so that by learning about the new brain we also learn about the old one. And, granted, on any view over time we interact to some degree with different parts of the person—most cells swap out, and we would be untroubled if this turned out to hold for neurons as well. But it seems to me that it is a more attractive picture of interpersonal interactions if there is a fundamental core of the person with which we interact that is numerically the same core in all the interactions, so that the changing cells are just expressions of that same core.</p> <p>This is not really much of an argument, just an expression of a feeling.</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-61780863865567016832025-12-03T12:13:29.628-06:002025-12-03T12:13:54.013-06:00Imposing the duty of gratitude<p>Normally if Alice did something supererogatory for Bob, Bob has gained a duty to be grateful to me. It is puzzling that we have this normative power to impose a duty on someone else. (Frank Russell’s <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20250905070916/https://www.abelard.org/e-f-russell.php">“And then there were none”</a> story turns on this.)</p> <p>In some cases the puzzle is solved by actual or presumed consent on the part of Bob.</p> <p>Here’s the hard case. Bob is in the right mind. Bob doesn’t want the superegatory deed. But his not wanting it, together with the burden to Bob of having to be grateful, is morally outweighed by the benefit to Bob, so Alice’s deed is still good and indeed supererogatory.</p> <p>I think in this case, Bob indeed acquires the duty of gratitude. We might now say that imposing the burden of gratitude was indeed a reason for Alice not to do the thing—but an insufficient reason. We can also lessen the problem by noting that if <em>being grateful</em> is a burden to Bob, that is because Bob is lacking in virtue—perhaps Bob has an excessive love of independence. To a virtuous person, being grateful is a joy. And often we shouldn’t worry much about imposing on someone something that is only a burden if they are lacking in a relevant virtue.</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-32526572205151671632025-12-02T12:02:00.003-06:002025-12-02T12:03:17.346-06:00Disbelief<p>Suppose Alice believes <em>p</em>. Does it follow that Alice <em>disbelieves</em> not-<span class="math inline"><em>p</em></span>? Or would she have to believe not-not-<em>p</em> to disbelieve not-<em>p</em>? (Granted, in both classical and intuitionistic logic, not-not-<span class="math inline"><em>p</em></span> follows from <span class="math inline"><em>p</em></span>.)</p> <p>Maybe this is a merely verbal question about “disbelieves”.</p> <p>Or could it be that disbelief is a primitive mental state on par with belief?</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-11871265731506911102025-12-02T12:00:00.001-06:002025-12-02T12:00:02.951-06:00Omniscience and vagueness<p>Suppose there is metaphysical vagueness, say that it’s metaphysically vague whether Bob is bald. God cannot believe that Bob is bald, since then Bob <em>is</em> bald. God cannot believe that Bob is not bald, since then Bob is <em>not</em> bald. Does God simply suspend judgment?</p> <p>Here is a neat solution for the classical theist. Classical theists believe in divine simplicity. Divine simplicity requires an extrinsic constitution model of divine belief or knowledge in the case of contingent things. Suppose a belief version. Then, plausibly, God’s beliefs about contingent things are partly constituted by the realities they are about. Hence, it is plausible that when a reality is vague, it is vague whether God believes in this reality.</p> <p>Here is another solution. If we think of belief as taking-as-true and disbelief as taking-as-false, we should suppose a third state of taking-as-vague. Then we say that for every proposition, God has a belief, disbelief or third state, as the case might be.</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-36979573374847761622025-12-01T15:21:00.003-06:002025-12-02T08:44:43.518-06:00Desire, preference, and utilitarianism<p>Desire-satisfaction utilitarianism (DSU) holds that the right thing to do is what maximizes everyone’s total desire satisfaction.</p> <p>This requires a view of desire on which desire does not supervene on preferences as in decision theory.</p> <p>There are two reasons. First, it is essential for DSU that there be a well-defined zero point for desire satisfaction, as according to DSU it’s good to add to the population people whose desire satisfaction is positive and bad to add people whose desire-satisfaction is negative. Preferences are always relative. Adding some fixed amount to all of a person’s utilities will not change their preferences, but can change which states have positive utility and which have negative utility, and hence can change whether the person’s on-the-whole state of desire satisfaction is positive or negative.</p> <p>Second, preferences cannot be compared across agents, but desires can. Suppose there are only two states, eating brownie and eating ice cream (one can’t have both), and you and I both prefer brownie. In terms of preference comparisons, there is nothing more to be said. Given any mixed pair of options <em>i</em> = 1, 2 with probability <span class="math inline"><em>p</em><sub><em>i</em></sub></span> of brownie and 1 − <em>p</em><sub><em>i</em></sub> of ice cream, I prefer option <span class="math inline"><em>i</em></span> to option <span class="math inline"><em>j</em></span> if and only if <span class="math inline"><em>p</em><sub><em>i</em></sub> &gt; <em>p</em><sub><em>j</em></sub></span>, and the same is true for you. But this does not capture the possibility that I may prefer brownie <em>by a lot</em> and you only by a <em>little</em>. Without capturing this possibility, the preference data is insufficient for utilitarian decisions (if I prefer brownie by a lot, and you by a little, and there is one brownie and one serving of ice cream, I should get the brownie and you should get the ice cream on a utilitarian calculus).</p> <p>The technical point here is that preferences are affine-invariant, but desires are not.</p> <p>But now it is <em>preferences</em> that are captured behavioristically—you prefer <em>A</em> over <em>B</em> provided you choose <em>A</em> over <span class="math inline"><em>B</em></span>. The extra information in desires is not captured behavioristically. Instead, it seems, it requires some kind of “mental intensity of desire”.</p> <p>And while there is reason to think that the preferences of rational agents at least can be captured numerically—the von Neumann–Morgenstern Representation Theorem suggests this—it seems dubious to think that mental intensities of desire can be captured numerically. But they need to be so captured for DSU to have a hope of success.</p> <p>The same point holds for desire-satisfaction egoism.</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-15471125575911717972025-11-29T17:33:00.001-06:002025-11-29T17:33:05.551-06:00Punishment and amnesia<p>There is an interesting philosophical literature on whether it is appropriate to punish someone who has amnesia with respect to the wrong they have done.</p> <p>It has just occurred to me (and it would be surprising if it’s not somewhere in that literature) that it is <em>obvious</em> that rewarding someone who has amnesia with respect to the good they have done is appropriate. To make the intuition clear, imagine the extreme case where the amnesia is due to the heroic action that otherwise would cry out for reward.</p> <p>If amnesia does not automatically wipe out positive desert, it also does not automatically wipe out negative desert.</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-20962139279034013122025-11-29T09:30:28.728-06:002025-11-29T09:32:39.294-06:00Fine-tuning of both physical and bridge laws<p>A correspondent pointed me to a <a href="https://r.jordan.im/download/religion/DIVINE%20FINE-TUNING%20VS.%20ELECTRONS%20IN%20LOVE.pdf">cool paper</a> by Neil Sinhababu arguing that the theist can’t consistently run a fine-tuning argument on which it is claimed that it is unlikely that the constants in the laws of physics permit intelligent life, because if God exists, then for any constants in the physical laws God can make psychophysical bridge laws that make sure that there is intelligent life. By choosing the right bridge laws, God can make a single electron be conscious, after all. Thus any set of constants in laws of physics is compatible with intelligent life.</p> <p>A quick response is that in the context of the fine-tuning argument, by “intelligent life” we should probably mean “intelligent biological life”. For instance, angels and conscious electrons don’t count, as they aren’t biological. And in fact, I think, in practice the fine-tuning argument is more about biological life than intelligent life as such. This suggests, however, that proponents of the fine-tuning argument should be clearer here. In particular, we (I am one of the proponents) should emphasize that there is a great value in the existence of biological life, and especially intelligent biological life, and this value is not found in intelligent non-biological life. This value is why a perfect being is not unlikely (or at least not extremely unlikely) to fine-tune the universe to for such life.</p> <p>Second, I think Sinhababu’s argument points to a more subtle way to formulate the fine-tuning thesis. What’s fine-tuned is not the laws of physics alone, but the <em>combination</em> of the laws of physics and the bridge laws, and they are fine-tuned together in such a way as to ensure that there is neither too little <em>nor too much</em> intelligent life. For instance, a set of psychophysical laws where any computation isomorphic to the kinds of computations our brains results in mental functioning like ours would result not just in panpsychism but omnisapientism—everything around us is sapient. For with some cleverness we can find an isomorphism between the states of a single particle and the states of the brain that preserves causation. But omnisapientism isn’t very good: it damages the significance of morality if everything we do creates and destroys vast numbers of sapient beings.</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-9724290625346174102025-11-26T14:22:00.002-06:002025-11-26T14:22:32.940-06:00Per se and per accidens multiplication of causes<p>Can there be an infinite sequence of efficient causes? Famously, Aquinas says both “No” and “Yes”, and makes a distinction between a <em>per se</em> ordering (“No”) and an <em>accidental</em> ordering (“Yes”). But it is difficult to reconstruct how the distinction goes, and whether there is good reason to maintain <a href="https://alexanderpruss.blogspot.com/2025/11/per-se-and-per-accidens-ordered-series.html">given modern physics</a>.</p> <p>Here is the central passage from <em>Summa Theologiae</em> I.46.2 reply 7, in <a href="https://www.freddoso.com/summa-translation/Part%201/st1-ques46.pdf">Freddoso’s translation</a>:</p> <blockquote> <p>It is impossible to proceed to infinity <em>per se</em> among efficient causes, i.e., it is impossible for causes that are required <em>per se</em> for a given effect to be multiplied to infinity—as, for instance, if a rock were being moved with a stick, and the stick were being moved by a hand, and so on ad infinitum.</p> </blockquote> <blockquote> <p>By contrast, it is not impossible to proceed to infinity <em>per accidens</em> among agent causes, i.e., it is not impossible if all the causes that are multiplied to infinity belong to a single order (<em>ordinem</em>) of causes and if their multiplication is incidental (<em>per accidens</em>)—as, for instance, if a craftsman were to use many hammers incidentally, because one after another kept breaking. In such a case, it is incidental to any given hammer that it acts after the action of a given one of the other hammers. In the same way, it is incidental to this man, insofar as he generates, that he himself was generated by another. For he generates insofar as he is a man and not insofar as he is the son of some other man, since all the men who generate belong to the same order (<em>gradum</em>) of efficient causality, viz., the order of a particular generating cause. In this sense, it is not impossible for man to be generated by man <em>ad infinitum</em>.</p> </blockquote> <blockquote> <p>However, it would indeed be impossible for the generation of this man to depend upon that man, and upon an elemental body [<em>a corpore elementari</em>], and upon the sun, and so on <em>ad infinitum</em>.</p> </blockquote> <p>What’s going on here? Re-reading the text (and double-checking against the Latin) I notice that <em>per se</em> and <em>per accidens</em> are introduced not as modifying the causal relations, but the infinite multiplication of causes. No indication is given initially that the causation functions differently in the two cases. Further, it is striking that both of the examples of <em>per accidens</em> multiplication of causes involve causes of the same type: hammers and humans (Freddoso’s “man” translates <em>homo</em> throughout the text).</p> <p>To a first approximation, it seems then that what is forbidden is a regress of infinitely many <em>types</em> of causes, whereas a regress of infinitely many <em>tokens</em> is permitted. But that is too simple. After all, if an infinite causal sequence of humans generating humans were possible, it would surely also be possible for each of these humans to be qualitatively different from the others—say, in exact shade of eye color—and hence for there to be infinitely many types among them. In other words, not just any type will do.</p> <p>Let’s focus in on two other ingredients in the text, the observation that the humans all “belong to the same order of efficient causality”, and the sun–elementary body–human example. Both of these rang a bell to me, because I had recently been writing on the <a href="https://alexanderpruss.blogspot.com/2025/09/a-thomistic-argument-for-principle-of.html">Principle of Proportionate Causality</a>. At <em>Summa Theologiae</em> <a href="https://www.freddoso.com/summa-translation/Part%201/st1-ques04.pdf">I.4.2</a>, St Thomas makes a different distinction that distinguishes between the human–human and the sun–body–human cases:</p> <blockquote> <p>whatever perfection exists in an effect must be found in the effective cause: either in the same formality, if it is a univocal agent—as when man reproduces man; or in a more eminent degree [<em>eminentiori modo</em>], if it is an equivocal agent—thus in the sun is the likeness of whatever is generated by the sun’s power.</p> </blockquote> <p>Here is a suggestion. In distinguishing <em>per se</em> and <em>per accidens</em> infinite multiplication of causes, Aquinas is indeed distinguishing counting types and tokens. But the types he is counting are what one might call “causal types” or “perfections”. The idea is that we have the same causal type when we have univocal agency, “as when man reproduces man”, and different causal type when we have equivocal agency, as when the sun generates something, since on Aquinas’ astronomical theory the sun is <em>sui generis</em> and hence when the sun generates, the sun is quite different from what it generates. In other words, I am tentatively suggesting that we identify the <em>gradus</em> of efficient causality of I.46.2 with the <em>modus</em> of perfection of I.4.2.</p> <p>The picture of efficient causation that arises from I.4.2 is that in a finite or infinite causal regress we have two types of moves between effect and cause: a lateral move to a cause with the same perfection as the effect and an ascending vertical move to a cause that has the perfection more eminently.</p> <p>The lateral moves only <em>accidentally</em> multiply the explanations, because the lateral moves do not <em>really</em> explain the perfection. If I got my humanity from another human, there is a sense in which this is not really an explanation of where my humanity comes from. The human I got my humanity from was just passing that humanity on. I need to move <em>upwards</em>, attributing my humanity to a higher cause. On this reading, Aquinas is claiming that there can only be finitely many upwards moves in a causal regress. Why? Maybe because infinite passing-on of more to less eminent perfections is just as unexplanatory as finite passing on of the same perfection. We need an ultimate origin of the perfections, a <em>highest</em> cause.</p> <p>I like this approach, but it fits better with the sun–elemenatary body–human example than the hand–stick–rock example. It seems, after all, that in the hand–stick–rock example we have the same relevant perfection in all three items—locomotion, which is passed from hand to stick and then from stick to rock. This would thus seem like a <em>per accidens</em> multiplication rather than a <em>per se</em> one. If so, then it is tempting to say that Aquinas’ hand–stick–rock example is inapt. But perhaps we can say this. Hand-motion is probably meant to be a voluntary human activity. Plausibly, this is different in causal type from stick-motion: going from stick to hand is indeed an explanatory ascent. But it’s harder to see the progression from rock to stick as an explanatory ascent. After all, a rock can move a stick just as much as a stick can move a rock. But perhaps we can still think we have an ascent from rock-moving to stick-moved-by-hand, since a stick-moved-by-hand maybe has more of the perfection of the voluntary hand motion to it? That sounds iffy, but it’s the best I can do.</p> <p>I wish Aquinas discussed a case of stick–stick–stick, where each stick moves the next? Would he make this be a <em>per se</em> multiplication of causes like the hand–stick–rock case? If so, that’s a count against my reading. Or would he say that it’s an accidental multiplication? If so, then my tentative reading might be right.</p> <p>It’s also possible that Aquinas’ examples of hand–stick–rock and sun–elementary body–human are in fact more unlike than he noticed, and that it is the latter that is a better example of <em>per se</em> multiplication of causes.</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com10tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-64841761690761280972025-11-21T11:10:00.003-06:002025-11-21T11:25:00.108-06:00Per se and per accidens ordered series<p>I’ve never been quite clear on Aquinas’ famous distinction between <em>per se</em> and <em>per accidens</em> ordered series, though I really like the clarity of Ed Feser’s <a href="https://edwardfeser.blogspot.com/2010/08/edwards-on-infinite-causal-series.html">explanation</a>. Abridging greatly:</p> <blockquote> <p>An instrumental cause is one that derives whatever causal power it has from something else. … [A]ll the causes in [a <em>per se</em>] series other than the first are instrumental [and thus] are said to be ordered <em>per se</em> or “essentially,” for their being causes at all depends essentially on the activity of that which uses them as instruments. By contrast, causes ordered per accidens or “accidentally” do not essentially depend for their efficacy on the activity of earlier causes in the series. To use Aquinas’s example, a father possesses the power to generate sons independently of the activity of his own father … .</p> </blockquote> <p>The problem here is that it’s really hard to think of any examples of purely instrumental causes in this sense. Take Aquinas’s example of a <em>per se</em> series where the hand moves a stick which moves the stone. That may work in his physics, but not in ours. Every stick is basically a stiff spring—there are no rigid bodies. So, for ease of visualization, let’s imagine a hand that pushes one end of a spring, and the other end of the spring pushes the stone. When you push your end of the spring, the spring compresses a little. A compression wave travels down the spring and the tension in the spring equalizes. The spring is now “charged” with elastic potential energy. And it then pushes on both the hand and the stone by means of the elastic potential energy. There is an unavoidable delay between your pushing your end of the spring and the other end pushing the stone (unavoidable, because physical causation doesn’t exceed the speed of light).</p> <p>Now, once the spring is compressed, its pushing on the stone is its own causal activity. We can see this as follows. Suppose God annihilated your hand. For a very short while, the other end of the spring wouldn’t notice. It would still be pushing against the stone, and the stone would still be moving. Then the spring would decompress in the direction where the hand used to be, and the stone’s movement would stop. But a very short while is still something—it’s enough to show that the spring is acting on its own. The point isn’t that the stone would gradually slow down. The point, rather, is that it takes a while for the stone’s movement to be <em>at all</em> affected, because otherwise we could have faster-than-light communication between the hand and the spring.</p> <p>What goes for springs goes for sticks. And I don’t know any better examples. Take Feser’s example in his <em>Five Ways</em> book of a cup held up by a desk which is held up by a floor. Feser says the desk “has no power on <em>its</em> own to hold the cup there. The desk too would fall to the earth unless the floor held it aloft”. Yes, it would—but not instantly. If the floor were to disappear, the tension in the desk’s legs—which, again, are just stiff springs—would continue to press upward on the desktop, which would press upward on the cup, counteracting gravity. But then because the bottoms of the legs are unsupported, the tension in the legs would relax, the legs would imperceptibly lengthen, and the whole thing would start to fall. Still, for a short while the top of the desk would have been utterly unaffected by the disappearance of the floor. It would only start accelerating downward once the tension in the legs dissipatated. It takes a time of at least <span class="math inline"><em>L</em>/<em>c</em></span>, where <span class="math inline"><em>L</em></span> is the length of the legs and <em>c</em> is the speed of light, for that to happen. Again, the legs of the table are charged-up springs whose internal tension is holding up the desktop.</p> <p>If this is right, then we don’t have any clear examples of the kind of purely instrumental causality that Feser—and, fairly likely, Aquinas—is talking about. Now, it may be that the deep metaphysics of causation is indeed such that indeed all creaturely causation is indeed of this instrumental sort, being the instrument of the first cause. But since Aquinas is using the idea of <em>per se</em> causal series to establish the existence of the first cause, we need an argument here that does not depend on the existence of the first cause.</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com22tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-61951306849331239382025-11-20T12:24:00.013-06:002025-12-03T10:20:02.407-06:00On Rasmussen and Bailey's "How to build a thought"<p>[Revised 11/21/2025 to fix a few issues.]</p> <p>Rasmussen and Bailey <a href="https://andrewmbailey.com/HowToBuild.pdf">prove</a> that under certain assumptions it follows that there are possible thoughts that are not grounded in anything physical.</p> <p>I want to offer a version of the argument that is slightly improved in a few ways.</p> <p>Start with the idea that an abstract object <span class="math inline"><em>x</em></span> is a “base” for types of thoughts. The bases might be physical properties, types of physical facts, etc. I assume that in all possible worlds exactly the same bases abstractly exist, but of course what bases <em>obtain</em> in a possible world can vary between worlds. I also assume that for objects, like bases, that are invariant between worlds, their pluralities are also invariant between worlds.</p> <p>Consider these claims:</p> <ol type="1"> <li><p>Independence: For any plurality <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span> of bases, there is a possible world where it is thought that exactly one of the <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span> obtains and there is no distinct plurality <em>y</em><em>y</em> of bases such that it is thought that exactly one of the <span class="math inline"><em>y</em><em>y</em></span> obtains.</p></li> <li><p>Comprehension: For any formula <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>x</em>)</span> with one free variable <em>x</em> that is satisfied by at least one base, there is a plurality <span class="math inline"><em>y</em><em>y</em></span> of all the bases that satisfy <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>x</em>)</span>.</p></li> <li><p>Plurality: There are at least two bases.</p></li> <li><p>Basing: Necessarily, if there is a plurality <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span> of bases and it is thought that exactly one of the <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span> obtains, then there obtains a base <em>z</em> such that necessarily if <em>z</em> obtains, it is thought that exactly one of the <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span> obtains.</p></li> </ol> <p>By the awkward locution “it is thought that <span class="math inline"><em>p</em></span>”, I mean that something or some plurality of things thinks that <span class="math inline"><em>p</em></span>, or there is a thinkerless thought that <em>p</em>. The reason for all these options is that I want to be friendly to early-Unger style materialists who think that there no thinkers. :-)</p> <p><strong>Theorem:</strong> If Independence, Comprehension, Plurality and S5 are true, Basing is false.</p> <p>Here is how this slightly improves on Rasmussen and Bailey:</p> <ul> <li><p>RB’s proofs use the Axiom of Choice twice. I avoid this. (They could avoid it, too, I expect.)</p></li> <li><p>I don’t need a separate category of thoughts to run the argument, just a “it is thought that exactly one of the <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span> exists” predicate. In particular, I don’t need types of thoughts, just abstract bases.</p></li> <li><p>RB use the concept of a thought that at <em>least</em> one of the <em>x</em><em>x</em> exists. This makes their Independence axiom a little bit less plausible, because one might think that, say, someone who thinks that at least one of the male dogs exists automatically also thinks that at least one of the dogs exists. One might also reasonably deny this, but it is nice to skirt the issue.</p></li> <li><p>I replace grounding with mere entailment in Basing.</p></li> <li><p>I think RB either forgot to assume Plurality or are working with a notion of plurality where empty collections are possible.</p></li> </ul> <p>Some notes:</p> <ul> <li><p>RB don’t explicitly assume Comprehension, but I don’t see how to prove their Cantorian Lemma 2 without it.</p></li> <li><p>Independence doesn’t fit with the necessary existence of an omniscient being. But we can make the argument fit with theism by replacing “it is thought” with “it is non-divinely thought”.</p></li> <li><p>I think the materialist could just hold that there are pluralities <em>x</em><em>x</em> of bases such that no one could think about them.</p></li> </ul> <p><strong>Proofs</strong></p> <p>Write <span class="math inline"><em>G</em>(<em>z</em>,<em>x</em><em>x</em>)</span> to mean that <em>z</em> is a base, the <em>x</em><em>x</em> are a plurality of bases, and necessarily if <em>z</em> obtains it is thought that exactly one of the <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span> obtains.</p> <p>The Theorem follows from the following lemmas.</p> <p><strong>Lemma 1:</strong> Given Independence, Basing and S5, for every plurality of bases <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span> there is a <span class="math inline"><em>z</em></span> such that <span class="math inline"><em>G</em>(<em>z</em>,<em>x</em><em>x</em>)</span> and for every other plurality of bases <span class="math inline"><em>y</em><em>y</em></span> it is not the case that <span class="math inline"><em>G</em>(<em>z</em>,<em>y</em><em>y</em>)</span>.</p> <p><strong>Proof:</strong> Let <span class="math inline"><em>w</em></span> be a possible world like in Independence. By Basing, at <em>w</em> there obtains a base <em>z</em> such that <span class="math inline"><em>G</em>(<em>z</em>,<em>x</em><em>x</em>)</span>. By S5 and the bases and pluralities thereof being the same at all worlds, we have <span class="math inline"><em>G</em>(<em>z</em>,<em>x</em><em>x</em>)</span> at the actual world, too. Suppose now that we actually have <span class="math inline"><em>G</em>(<em>z</em>,<em>y</em><em>y</em>)</span> with <em>y</em><em>y</em> other than <em>x</em><em>x</em>. Then at <span class="math inline"><em>w</em></span>, it is thought that exactly one of <em>y</em><em>y</em> exists. But that contradicts the choice of <em>w</em>. Thus, actually, we have <span class="math inline"><em>G</em>(<em>z</em>,<em>x</em><em>x</em>)</span> but not <span class="math inline"><em>G</em>(<em>z</em>,<em>y</em><em>y</em>)</span>.</p> <p><strong>Lemma 2:</strong> Assume Comprehension and Plurality. Then there is no formula <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>z</em>,<em>x</em><em>x</em>)</span> open only in <em>z</em> and <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span> such that for every plurality of bases <em>x</em><em>x</em> there is a <em>z</em> such that <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>z</em>,<em>x</em><em>x</em>)</span> while for every other plurality of bases <span class="math inline"><em>y</em><em>y</em></span> it is not the case that <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>z</em>,<em>y</em><em>y</em>)</span>.</p> <p><strong>Proof:</strong> Suppose we have such a <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>z</em>,<em>x</em><em>x</em>)</span>. Say that <em>z</em> is an admissible base provided that there is a unique plurality of bases <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span> such that <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>z</em>,<em>x</em><em>x</em>)</span>. I claim that there is an admissible base <span class="math inline"><em>z</em></span> such that <span class="math inline"><em>z</em></span> is not among any <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span> such that <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>z</em>,<em>x</em><em>x</em>)</span>. For suppose not. Then for all admissible bases <span class="math inline"><em>z</em></span>, <span class="math inline"><em>z</em></span> is among all <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span> such that <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>z</em>,<em>x</em><em>x</em>)</span>. Let <em>a</em> and <span class="math inline"><em>b</em></span> be distinct bases. Let <span class="math inline"><em>f</em><em>f</em></span>, <span class="math inline"><em>g</em><em>g</em></span> and <span class="math inline"><em>h</em><em>h</em></span> be the pluralities consisting of <em>a</em>, of <span class="math inline"><em>b</em></span>, and of both <span class="math inline"><em>a</em></span> and <span class="math inline"><em>b</em></span> respectively. Then the above assumptions show that we must have <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>a</em>,<em>f</em><em>f</em>)</span>, <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>b</em>,<em>g</em><em>g</em>)</span> and either <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>a</em>,<em>h</em><em>h</em>)</span> or <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>b</em>,<em>h</em><em>h</em>)</span>, and either of these options violates our assumptions on <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em></span>. By Comprehension, then, let <span class="math inline"><em>y</em><em>y</em></span> be the plurality of all admissible bases <em>z</em> such that <em>z</em> is not among any <span class="math inline"><em>x</em><em>x</em></span> such that <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>z</em>,<em>x</em><em>x</em>)</span>. Let <em>z</em> be an admissible base such that <span class="math inline"><em>ϕ</em>(<em>z</em>,<em>y</em><em>y</em>)</span>. Is <em>z</em> among the <span class="math inline"><em>y</em><em>y</em></span>? If it is, then it’s not. If it is not, then it is. Contradiction!</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-46027893508863033222025-11-19T09:26:00.003-06:002025-11-19T09:26:27.354-06:00Omniscience, timelessness, and A-theory<p>I’ve been thinking a lot this semester, in connection with my Philosophy of Time seminar, about whether the A-theory of time—the view that there is an objective present—can be made consistent with classical theism. I am now thinking there are two main problems here.</p> <ol type="1"> <li><p>God’s vision of reality is a meticulous conscious vision, and hence if reality is different at different times, God’s consciousness is different at different times, contrary to a <a href="https://alexanderpruss.blogspot.com/2025/11/beyond-metaphysical-immutability.html">correct understanding</a> of immutability.</p></li> <li><p>One can only know <em>p</em> when <em>p</em> is true; one can only know <em>p</em> when one exists; thus, if <em>p</em> is true only at a time, one can only know <em>p</em> if one is in time. On an A-theory of time, there are propositions that are only true in time (such as that presently I am sitting), and hence an omniscient God has to be in time. Briefly: if all times are the same to God, God can’t know time-variable truths.</p></li> </ol> <p>I stand by the first argument.</p> <p>However, there may be a way out of (2).</p> <p>Start with this. God exists at the actual world. Some classical theists will balk at this, saying that this denies divine transcendence. But there is an argument somewhat parallel to (2) here. If all worlds are the same to God, God can’t know world-variable truths, i.e., contingent truths.</p> <p>Moreover, we can add something positive about what it is for God to exist at world <em>w</em>: God exists at <em>w</em> just in case God actualizes <em>w</em>. There is clearly nothing contrary to divine transcendence in God’s existing at a world in the sense of actualizing it. And of course it is only the actual world that God actualizes (though it is true at a non-actual world <span class="math inline"><em>w</em>′</span> that God actualizes <span class="math inline"><em>w</em>′</span>; but all sorts of false things are true at non-actual worlds).</p> <p>But given the A-theory, reality itself includes changing truths, including the truth about what it is now. If worlds are ways that all reality is, then on A-theory worlds are “tensed worlds”. Given a time <em>t</em>, say that a <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span>-world is a world where <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span> is present. Argument (2) requires God to exist at a <em>t</em>-world in order for God to know something that is true only at a <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span>-world (say, to know that <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span> is present).</p> <p>Now suppose we have an A-theory that isn’t presentism, i.e., we have growing block or moving spotlight. Then one does not need to exist at <em>t</em> in order to exist at a <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span>-world: on both growing block and moving spotlight our 2025-world has dinosaurs existing at it, but not in 2025, of course. But if one does not need to exist at <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span> in order to exist at a <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span>-world, it is not clear that one needs to exist in time <em>at all</em> in order to exist at a <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span>-world. The <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span>-world can have a “locus” (not a place, not a time) that is atemporal, and a being that exists at that atemporal locus can still know that <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span> is present and all the other A-propositions true at that <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span>-world.</p> <p>Next suppose presentism, perhaps the most popular A-theory. Then everything that exists at a <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span>-world exists at <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span>. But that God exists at the <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span>-world still only consists in God’s actualizing the <em>t</em>-world. This does not seem to threaten divine transcendence, aseity, simplicity, immutability, or anything else the classical theist should care about. It does make God exist at <em>t</em>, and hence makes God in time, but since God’s existing in time consists in God’s actualizing a <span class="math inline"><em>t</em></span>-world, this kind of existence in time does not make God dependent on time.</p> <p>I still have some worries about these models. And we still have (1), which I think is decisive.</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-53104043392798955712025-11-17T13:40:00.004-06:002025-11-17T13:41:04.762-06:00A bit of finetuning<p>Here’s a bit of finetuning in the world’s laws that I just noticed. All the four fundamental forces of nature are conveniently local, in the sense that they drop off to nearly zero with distance. If any one of them weren’t local, the world would not be likely to be predictable to limited knowers like us.</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-91404739705414613642025-11-17T09:58:00.001-06:002025-11-17T09:58:17.565-06:00Towards a solution to the "God as author of evil" problem for the Thomistic model of meticulous providence<p>On the Thomistic primary/secondary causation model of meticulous divine providence, when we act wrongly, God fully determines the positive aspects of the action with primary causation, and we in parallel cause the action with secondary causation.</p> <p>Like many people, I worry that this makes God the author of sin in an objectionable way.</p> <p>Alice and Bob are studying together for a calculus exam that will be graded on a curve. In order that she may do terribly on the exam, and thus that he might do better, and hence be more likely to get into his dream PhD program in ethics, Bob lies to Alice, who has missed three weeks of class, that the derivative of the logarithm is the exponential.</p> <p>What does God cause in Bob’s action on the Thomistic model? It seems that all of the following are positive aspects:</p> <ol type="1"> <li><p>The physical movements in Bob’s mouth, throat, and lungs.</p></li> <li><p>The sounds in the air.</p></li> </ol> <p>So far we don’t have a serious theological problem. For (1) and (2) are not intrinsically bad, since Bob could virtuously utter the same sounds while playacting on stage. But let’s add some more aspects:</p> <ol start="3" type="1"> <li><p>Bob’s intention that the speech constitute an assertion of the proposition that the derivative of the logarithm is the exponential.</p></li> <li><p>Bob’s intention that the asserted proposition be a falsehood that Alice comes to believe and that leads to her doing terribly on the exam.</p></li> </ol> <p>Perhaps one can argue that falsity a negative thing—a lack of conformity with reality. However, <em>intending falsity</em> seems to be a positive thing, a positive (but wicked) act of the will. Thus it seems that (3) and (4) are positive things. But once we put together all of (1)–(4), or even just (3) and (4), then it’s hard to deny that what we have is something wicked, and so if God is intending all of (1)–(4), it’s hard to avoid the idea that this makes God responsible for the sin in a highly problematic way.</p> <p>There may be a way out, however. In both written and spoken language, meaning is normally not constituted just by the positive aspects of reality but also by negative ones. In spoken language, we can think of the positive aspects as the peaks of the soundwaves (considered as pressure waves in the air). But if you remove the troughs from the soundwaves, you lose the communication. In print, on the other hand, the meaning depends not just on the ink that’s there, but on the ink that’s not there. A page wholly covered with ink means nothing. We only have meaningful letters because the inked regions are surrounded by non-inked regions.</p> <p>It could well turn out that the language of the mind in discursively thinking beings like us is like that as well, so that a thought or intention is constituted not only by ontologically positive but also by ontologically negative aspects. Now you could be responsible for the ink within the print inscription</p> <ol start="5" type="1"> <li>The derivative of the logarithm is the exponential</li> </ol> <p>without being responsible for the inscription. For instance, you and a friend might have had a plan to draw a black rectangle and you divided up the labor as follows: you inked the region of rectangle covered by the letters of “The derivative of the logarithm is the exponential” and then your friend would ink the rest of the containing rectangle—i.e., everything outside the letters. But your friend didn’t do the job. Similarly, then, if intentions are constituted by both positive and negative features, God could intend the positive features of an intention without being responsible for the intention as such.</p> <p>This does place constraints on the language of the mind, i.e., on the actual mental accidents that constitutes our thoughts, and specifically our intentions. Note, though, that we don’t need that <em>all</em> intentions have a negative constituent. Only intentions to produce negative things, like falsehood, need to have a negative constituent for us to avert the problem of God willing intentional sin. We could imagine a written language where positive phrases are written in two colors of ink, one for the letters and the other for the surrounding rectangle, and their negations are written by omitting the ink for the letters. In such a language, statements involving positive phrases are purely positive, while those involving negative phrases are partly negative.</p> <p>I am not very happy with this solution. I still worry that being responsible for the ink in (5) makes one responsible for (5) when one chooses not to have the rest of the rectangle filled in.</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3891434218564545511.post-36321948293170826902025-11-14T11:45:00.003-06:002025-11-14T11:45:22.162-06:00Perfect vision<p>One of the major themes in modern philosophy was concerns about the way that our contact with the world is mediated by our “ideas”. Thus, you are looking at a tree. But are you really seeing the <em>tree</em>, or are you just seeing your <em>sense-impression</em>, which doesn’t have much in common with the tree? Even direct realists like Reid who say you are seeing the cat still think that your conscious experience involves qualia that aren’t like a tree.</p> <p>Thinking about this gives us the impression that an epistemically better way to relate to the tree would be if the tree itself took the place of our sense-impressions or qualia. Berkeley did that, but at the cost of demoting the tree to a mere figment of our perception. But if we could do that without demoting the tree, then we would be better kinds of perceivers.</p> <p>However, that on some theory we would be better kinds of perceivers is not a strong reason to think that theory is <em>true</em>! After all, we would be better perceivers if we could see far infrared, but we can’t. It’s not my point to question the orthodoxy about our perceptions of trees.</p> <p>But now think about beatitude, where the blessed see God. If seeing God is like seeing a tree in the sense that there is something like a mediating supersense-impression in us, then something desirable is lacking in the blessed. And that’s not right. Such a mediated vision of God is not as intimate as we could wish for. Would it not be so much more intimate if it were a direct vision of God in the fullest sense, where God himself takes the place of our qualia? We shouldn’t argue from “it would be better that way” to “it is that way” in our earthly lives, but in beatitude it does not seem such a terrible argument.</p> <p>But where this kind of argument really comes into its own is when we think of what the epistemic life of a perfect being would be like. The above considerations suggest that when God sees the tree (and it is traditional to compare God’s knowledge of creation to vision), the vision is fully direct and intimate, and the tree itself plays the role of sense-impressions in us. We would expect a perfect being’s vision to be like that.</p> <p>Now notice, however, that this is an account of God’s vision of the world on which God’s vision is partly extrinsically constituted: the tree partly constitutes God’s conscious experience of the tree. This is the extrinsic constitution model of how a simple God can know. We have thus started with us and with considerations of perfection, and have come to something like this model without any considerations of divine simplicity. Thus the model is not an <em>ad hoc</em> defense of divine simplicity. It is, rather, a model of the perfect way to epistemically relate to the world.</p> Alexander R Prusshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05989277655934827117noreply@blogger.com4