Dear All,
I`ve just received the abstract from Professor Lowe so I`m re-sending
the invitation
Best
Kriszta
The CEU Philosophy Department cordially invites you to a talk
(as part of its Departmental Colloquium series)
by
Edward Jonathan Lowe(Durham University)
on
What is the Source of Our Knowledge of Modal Truths?
Tuesday, 23 March, 2010, 4.30 PM, Zrinyi 14, Room 412
ABSTRACT
There is currently intense interest in the question of the source of
our presumed knowledge of modal truths — where by ‘modal truths’ I mean,
more specifically, truths concerning what is, or is not, metaphysically
possible or necessary. Some philosophers try to locate this source in
our capacities to conceive or imagine various actual or non-actual
states of affairs, but this approach is open to certain familiar and
seemingly powerful objections. A different and ostensibly more promising
approach has been developed recently by Timothy Williamson, according to
which our capacity for modal knowledge is just an extension, or
by-product, of our general capacity to acquire knowledge of true
counterfactual conditionals — a capacity that we deploy ubiquitously in
everyday life. Williamson’s theory crucially involves a thesis to the
effect that modal truths can be analysed or defined in terms of
counterfactual truths. In this paper, I shall query Williamson’s account
on a number of points, including this thesis. I have in fact for a long
time defended the very reverse of this thesis, namely, that
counterfactual truths are instead to be defined in terms of modal
truths. If modal truths are thus prior to counterfactual truths, it
seems hopeless to pursue Williamson’s proposal, and we need an
alternative one. And we do in any case, I shall argue, since there are
defects in Williamson’s proposal which do not turn on the foregoing
point. My own positive proposal, which owes an intellectual debt to the
work of Kit Fine on modality and essence, appeals instead to our
capacity to grasp essences — where essences are understood not in the
currently prevailing fashion, made famous by the work of Saul Kripke,
according to which all talk of essences may be explicated in terms of
the language of ‘possible worlds’, but rather in a neo-Aristotelian
fashion, according to which essences are expressed by ‘real
definitions’.
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