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  •   Mathematical Pluralism
    Noûs Pub Date : 2023-03-19
    Edward N. Zalta

    Mathematical pluralism can take one of three forms: (1) every consistent mathematical theory consists of truths about its own domain of individuals and relations; (2) every mathematical theory, consistent or inconsistent, consists of truths about its own (possibly uninteresting) domain of individuals and relations; and (3) the principal philosophies of mathematics are each based upon an insight or

  •   What is rational belief?
    Noûs Pub Date : 2023-03-19
    Julien Dutant, Clayton Littlejohn

    A theory of rational belief should get the cases right. It should also reach its verdicts using the right theoretical assumptions. Leading theories seem to predict the wrong things. With only one exception, they don't accommodate principles that we should use to explain these verdicts. We offer a theory of rational belief that combines an attractive picture of epistemic desirability with plausible

  •   Conditional Intentions and Shared Agency
    Noûs Pub Date : 2023-03-06
    Matthew Rachar

    Shared agency is a distinctive kind of sociality that involves interdependent planning, practical reasoning, and action between participants. Philosophical reflection suggests that agents engage in this form of sociality when a special structure of interrelated psychological attitudes exists between them, a set of attitudes that constitutes a collective intention. I defend a new way to understand collective

  •   Dimensions of Value
    Noûs Pub Date : 2023-03-06
    Brian Hedden, Daniel Muñoz

    Value pluralists believe in multiple dimensions of value. What does betterness along a dimension have to do with being better overall? Any systematic answer begins with the Strong Pareto principle: one thing is overall better than another if it is better along one dimension and at least as good along all others. We defend Strong Pareto from recent counterexamples and use our discussion to develop a

  •   The Normativity of Gender
    Noûs Pub Date : 2023-03-03
    R. A. Rowland

    There are important similarities between moral thought and talk and thought and talk about gender: disagreements about gender, like disagreements about morality, seem to be intractable and to outstrip descriptive agreement; and it seems coherent to reject any definition of what it is to be a woman in terms of particular social, biological, or other descriptive features, just as it seems coherent to

  •   Causal theories of spacetime
    Noûs Pub Date : 2023-02-19
    Sam Baron, Baptiste Le Bihan

    We develop a new version of the causal theory of spacetime. Whereas traditional versions of the theory seek to identify spatiotemporal relations with causal relations, the version we develop takes causal relations to be the grounds for spatiotemporal relations. Causation is thus distinct from, and more basic than, spacetime. We argue that this non-identity theory, suitably developed, avoids the challenges

  •   Ignorance and awareness
    Noûs Pub Date : 2023-02-19
    Paul Silva, Robert Weston Siscoe

    Knowledge implies the presence of a positive relation between a person and a fact. Factual ignorance, on the other hand, implies the absence of some positive relation between a person and a fact. The two most influential views of ignorance hold that what is lacking in cases of factual ignorance is knowledge or true belief, but these accounts fail to explain a number of basic facts about ignorance.

  •   What Is Trustworthiness?
    Noûs Pub Date : 2023-02-03
    Christoph Kelp, Mona Simion

    This paper develops a novel, bifocal account of trustworthiness according to which both trustworthiness simpliciter (as in ‘Ann is trustworthy’) and trustworthiness to phi (as in ‘Ann is trustworthy when it comes to keeping your secrets’) are analysed in terms of dispositions to fulfil one's obligations. We also offer a systematic account of the relation between the two types of trustworthiness, an

  •   What is social structural explanation? A causal account
    Noûs Pub Date : 2023-01-12
    Lauren N. Ross

    Social scientists appeal to various “structures” in their explanations including public policies, economic systems, and social hierarchies. Significant debate surrounds the explanatory relevance of these factors for various outcomes such as health, behavioral, and economic patterns. This paper provides a causal account of social structural explanation that is motivated by Haslanger (2016). This account

  •   Tropes and Qualitative Change
    Noûs Pub Date : 2023-01-12
    Paul Audi

    This paper presents the view that tropes can change, and so are not individuated by their determinate qualitative characters. On the view I have in mind, a trope is at any given time fully determinate, but can change qualitatively within the bounds set by a determinable essence. A charge trope, for example, must at any time have some exact intensity, but can survive changes in intensity. My argument

  •   The Boltzmann Brains Puzzle
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-12-29
    Ron Avni

    Leading cosmological theories engender a controversial puzzle which has prompted philosophers to propose competing epistemological solutions and physicists to propose methodological changes to cosmology. The puzzle arises from the prediction that every brain on Earth will eventually be vastly outnumbered by physical duplicates formed by random collisions of particles in outer space. Supposing that

  •   Indirect Compatibilism
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-12-16
    Andrew J. Latham

    In this paper I will introduce a new compatibilist account of free action: indirect conscious control compatibilism, or just indirect compatibilism for short. On this account, actions are free either when they are caused by compatibilist-friendly conscious psychological processes, or else by sub-personal level processes influenced in particular ways by compatibilist-friendly conscious psychological

  •   How to Perform a Nonbasic Action
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-12-08
    Mikayla Kelley

    Some actions we perform “just like that” without taking a means, e.g., raising your arm or wiggling your finger. Other actions—the nonbasic actions—we perform by taking a means, e.g., voting by raising your arm or illuminating a room by flipping a switch. A nearly ubiquitous view about nonbasic action is that one's means to a nonbasic action constitutes the nonbasic action, as raising your arm constitutes

  •   Fictional Domains
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-12-08
    Dominic Gregory

    Quantifiers frequently figure in works of fiction. But occurrences of quantificational expressions within fictions seem no more inevitably to be associated with real domains than uses of names within fictions seem inevitably to be associated with existing referents. The paper outlines some philosophical puzzles resulting from this apparent lack of associated domains, puzzles that are broadly analogous

  •   Decision and foreknowledge
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-12-05
    J. Dmitri Gallow

    My topic is how to make decisions when you possess foreknowledge of the consequences of your choice. Many have thought that these kinds of decisions pose a distinctive and novel problem for causal decision theory (CDT). My thesis is that foreknowledge poses no new problems for CDT. Some of the purported problems are not problems. Others are problems, but they are not problems for CDT. Rather, they

  •   Probabilities of conditionals: updating Adams
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-11-14
    Ivano Ciardelli, Adrian Ommundsen

    The problem of probabilities of conditionals is one of the long-standing puzzles in philosophy of language. We defend and update Adams' solution to the puzzle: the probability of an epistemic conditional is not the probability of a proposition, but a probability under a supposition.

  •   Suspending Belief in Credal Accounts
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-11-08
    Andrew del Rio

    Traditionally epistemologists have taken doxastic states to come in three varieties—belief, disbelief, and suspension. Recently many epistemologists have taken our doxastic condition to be usefully represented by credences—quantified degrees of belief. Moreover, some have thought that this new credal picture is sufficient to account for everything we want to explain with the old traditional picture

  •   Constraints, You, and Your Victims
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-10-29
    Bastian Steuwer

    Deontologists believe that it is wrong to violate a right even if this will prevent a greater number of violations of the same right. This leads to the paradox of deontology: If respecting everyone's rights is equally important, why should we not minimize the number of rights violations? One possible answer is agent-based. This answer points out that you should not violate rights even if this will

  •   Moral Uncertainty, Noncognitivism, and the Multi-Objective Story
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-09-25
    Pamela Robinson, Katie Steele

    We sometimes seem to face fundamental moral uncertainty, i.e., uncertainty about what is morally good or morally right that cannot be reduced to ordinary descriptive uncertainty. This phenomenon raises a puzzle for noncognitivism, according to which moral judgments are desire-like attitudes as opposed to belief-like attitudes. Can a state of moral uncertainty really be a noncognitive state? So far

  •   Consciousness and welfare subjectivity
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-09-16
    Gwen Bradford

    Many philosophers tacitly accept the View: consciousness is necessary for being a welfare subject. That is, in order to be an eligible bearer of welfare goods and bads, an entity must be capable of phenomenal consciousness. However, this paper argues that, in the absence of a compelling rationale, we are not licensed to accept the View, because doing so amounts to fallacious reasoning in theorizing

  •   Grounding and defining identity
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-09-13
    Jon Erling Litland

    I systematically defend a novel account of the grounds for identity and distinctness facts: they are all uniquely zero-grounded. First, this Null Account is shown to avoid a range of problems facing other accounts: a relation satisfying the Null Account would be an excellent candidate for being the identity relation. Second, a plenitudinist view of relations suggests that there is such a relation.

  •   Virtual terrors
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-09-11
    Emmanuel Ordóñez Angulo

    A long-standing aim of cinema – in particular of ‘extreme’, ‘unwatchable’ or ‘feel- bad’ cinema – has been to acquaint viewers with extreme suffering. In this article I first offer an explication of that aim in terms of recent work in philosophy of mind, then exploit the resulting framework to examine claims to the effect that a new technological development, Virtual Reality, provides cinema's best

  •   Degrees of Consciousness
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-08-04
    Andrew Y. Lee

    Is a human more conscious than an octopus? In the science of consciousness, it's oftentimes assumed that some creatures (or mental states) are more conscious than others. But in recent years, a number of philosophers have argued that the notion of degrees of consciousness is conceptually confused. This paper (1) argues that the most prominent objections to degrees of consciousness are unsustainable

  •   Controlling our Reasons
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-08-04
    Sophie Keeling

    Philosophical discussion on control has largely centred around control over our actions and beliefs. Yet this overlooks the question of whether we also have control over the reasons for which we act and believe. To date, the overriding assumption appears to be that we do not, and with seemingly good reason. We cannot choose to act for a reason and acting-for-a-reason is not itself something we do.

  •   Faith and traditions
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-07-28
    Lara Buchak

    One phenomenon arising in epistemic life is allegiance to, and break from, a tradition. This phenomenon has three central features. First, individuals who adhere to a tradition seem to respond dogmatically to evidence against their tradition. Second, individuals from different traditions appear to see the same evidence differently. And third, conversion from one tradition to another appears to be different

  •   Updating without evidence
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-07-22
    Yoaav Isaacs, Jeffrey Sanford Russell

    Sometimes you are unreliable at fulfilling your doxastic plans: for example, if you plan to be fully confident in all truths, probably you will end up being fully confident in some falsehoods by mistake. In some cases, there is information that plays the classical role of evidence—your beliefs are perfectly discriminating with respect to some possible facts about the world—and there is a standard

  •   Semantic Reasons
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-07-14
    Samuel Cumming

    An analysis of a predicate normally takes the form of a condition that is both necessary and sufficient for the predicate's application. Here I consider the idea, due originally to Friedrich Waismann, that semantic analyses might include conditions that are defeasible, and so allow for exceptions. Analyses of this sort can be expressed in nonmonotonic logic, a post-Waismann development. I'll argue

  •   Conventionalism about mathematics and logic
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-07-12
    Hartry Field

    Conventionalism about mathematics has much in common with two other views: fictionalism and the multiverse view (aka plenitudinous platonism). The three views may differ over the existence of mathematical objects, but they agree in rejecting a certain kind of objectivity claim about mathematics, advocating instead an extreme pluralism. The early parts of the paper will try to elucidate this anti-objectivist

  •   Radical parochialism about reference
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-06-28
    Will Gamester, J. Robert G. Williams

    We can use radically different reference-schemes to generate the same truth-conditions for the sentences of a language. In this paper, we do three things. (1) Distinguish two arguments that deploy this observation to derive different conclusions. The first argues that reference is radically indeterminate: there is no fact of the matter what ordinary terms refer to. This threat is taken seriously and

  •   Perceptual learning and reasons-responsiveness
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-06-24
    Zoe Jenkin

    Perceptual experiences are not immediately responsive to reasons. You see a stick submerged in a glass of water as bent no matter how much you know about light refraction. Due to this isolation from reasons, perception is traditionally considered outside the scope of epistemic evaluability as justified or unjustified. Is perception really as independent from reasons as visual illusions make it out

  •   Is there an epistemic advantage to being oppressed?
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-06-23
    Lidal Dror

    Do the oppressed have an epistemic advantage when it comes to knowing about the systems that oppress them? If so, what explains this advantage? In this paper, I consider whether an epistemic advantage can be derived from the oppressed's contingent tendency to have more relevant experiences and motivation than the non-oppressed; or, alternatively, whether an advantage derives from the oppressed's very

  •   In defense of the armchair: Against empirical arguments in the philosophy of perception
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-06-18
    Peter Fisher Epstein

    A recurring theme dominates recent philosophical debates about the nature of conscious perception: naïve realism's opponents claim that the view is directly contradicted by empirical science. I argue that, despite their current popularity, empirical arguments against naïve realism are fundamentally flawed. The non-empirical premises needed to get from empirical scientific findings to substantive philosophical

  •   Should moral intuitionism go social?
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-06-17
    Marvin Backes, Matti Eklund, Eliot Michaelson

    In recent work, Bengson, Cuneo, and Shafer-Landau (2020) develop a new social version of moral intuitionism that promises to explain why our moral intuitions are trustworthy. In this paper, we raise several worries for their account and present some general challenges for the broader class of views we call Social Moral Intuitionism. We close by reflecting on Bengson, Cuneo, and Shafer-Landau's comparison

  •   Space, time and parsimony
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-06-17
    Daniel Nolan

    This paper argues that all of the standard theories about the divisions of space and time can benefit from, and may need to rely on, parsimony considerations. More specifically, whether spacetime is discrete, gunky or pointy, there are wildly unparsimonious rivals to standard accounts that need to be resisted by proponents of those accounts, and only parsimony considerations offer a natural way of

  •   Reflection and Conditionalization: Comments on Michael Rescorla
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-06-16
    Bas C. van Fraassen

    Rescorla explores the relation between Reflection, Conditionalization, and Dutch book arguments in the presence of a weakened concept of sure loss and weakened conditions of self-transparency for doxastic agents. The literature about Reflection and about Dutch Book arguments, though overlapping, are distinct, and its history illuminates the import of Rescorla's investigation. With examples from a previous

  •   Credal imprecision and the value of evidence
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-06-16
    Nilanjan Das

    This paper is about a tension between two theses. The first is Value of Evidence: roughly, the thesis that it is always rational for an agent to gather and use cost-free evidence for making decisions. The second is Rationality of Imprecision: the thesis that an agent can be rationally required to adopt doxastic states that are imprecise, i.e., not representable by a single credence function. While

  •   Criteria of identity without sortals
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-06-12
    Justin Mooney

    Many philosophers believe that the criteria of identity over time for ordinary objects entail that such objects are permanent members of certain sortal kinds. The sortal kinds in question have come to be known as substance sortal kinds. But in this article, I defend a criterion of identity that is suited to phasalism, the view that alleged substance sortals are in fact phase sortals. The criterion

  •   Hedged testimony
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-04-21
    Peter van Elswyk

    Speakers offer testimony. They also hedge. This essay offers an account of how hedging makes a difference to testimony. Two components of testimony are considered: how testimony warrants a hearer's attitude, and how testimony changes a speaker's responsibilities. Starting with a norm-based approach to testimony where hearer's beliefs are prima facie warranted because of social norms and speakers acquire

  •   Parity, Moral Options, and the Weights of Reasons
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-04-17
    Chris Tucker

    The (moral) permissibility of an act is determined by the relative weights of reasons, or so I assume. But how many weights does a reason have? Weight Monism is the idea that reasons have a single weight value. There is just the weight of reasons. Weight Pluralism holds that reasons have at least two weight values and these values aren't always equivalent. The simplest versions of Weight Monism hold

  •   REFLECTING ON DIACHRONIC DUTCH BOOKS
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-03-23
    Michael Rescorla

    Conditionalization governs how to reallocate credence in light of new evidence. One prominent argument in favor of Conditionalization holds that an agent who violates it is vulnerable to a diachronic Dutch book: a series of acceptable bets offered at multiple times that inflict a sure loss. van Fraassen argues that an agent who violates the Principle of Reflection is likewise vulnerable to a diachronic

  •   The case for comparability
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-02-13
    Cian Dorr, Jacob M. Nebel, Jake Zuehl

    We argue that all comparative expressions in natural language obey a principle that we call Comparability: if 𝑥x$x$ and 𝑦y$y$ are at least as 𝐹F$F$ as themselves, then either 𝑥x$x$ is at least as 𝐹F$F$ as 𝑦y$y$ or 𝑦y$y$ is at least as 𝐹F$F$ as 𝑥x$x$ . This principle has been widely rejected among philosophers, especially by ethicists, and its falsity has been claimed to have important normative

  •   The many-worlds theory of consciousness
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-02-10
    Christian List

    This paper sketches a new and somewhat heterodox metaphysical theory of consciousness: the “many-worlds theory”. It drops the assumption that all conscious subjects’ experiences are features of one and the same world and instead associates different subjects with different “first-personally centred worlds”. We can think of these as distinct “first-personal realizers” of a shared “third-personal world”

  •   The structure of analog representation
    Noûs Pub Date : 2022-01-31
    Andrew Y. Lee, Joshua Myers, Gabriel Oak Rabin

    This paper develops a theory of analog representation. We first argue that the mark of the analog is to be found in the nature of a representational system's interpretation function, rather than in its vehicles or contents alone. We then develop the rulebound structure theory of analog representation, according to which analog systems use interpretive rules that map syntactic structural features onto

  •   Accurate believers are deductively cogent
    Noûs Pub Date : 2021-12-14
    Matthew Hewson

    This paper argues that the agent concerned to have accurate (outright) beliefs will have a consistent and multi-premise closed belief set, and not a (merely) single-premise closed and (merely) pairwise consistent belief set, as has often been thought. This argument rests on the fact that we need a notion of accuracy coherence for belief that is belief-sensitive; sensitive to one's perspective, in a

  •   Mundane hallucinations and new wave relationalism
    Noûs Pub Date : 2021-12-02
    Jacob Beck

    Relationalism maintains that mind-independent objects are essential constituents of veridical perceptual experiences. According to the argument from hallucination, relationalism is undermined by perfect hallucinations, experiences that are introspectively indistinguishable from veridical perceptual experiences but lack an object. Recently, a new wave of relationalists have responded by questioning

  •   Counterfactual epistemic scenarios
    Noûs Pub Date : 2021-11-17
    John Mackay

    In two-dimensional semantics in the tradition of Davies and Humberstone, whether a singular term receives an epistemically shifted reading in the scope of a modal operator depends on whether the world considered as actual is shifted. This means that epistemically shifted readings should be available only in environments where an explicit contrast between the actual world and some counterfactual worlds

  •   Blameworthiness, desert, and luck
    Noûs Pub Date : 2021-11-10
    Mitchell N. Berman

    Philosophers disagree about whether outcome luck can affect an agent's “moral responsibility.” Focusing on responsibility's “negative side,” some maintain, and others deny, that an action's results bear constitutively on how “blameworthy” the actor is, and on how much blame or punishment they “deserve.” Crucially, both sides to the debate assume that an actor's blameworthiness and negative desert are

  •   How chance explains
    Noûs Pub Date : 2021-10-15
    Michael Townsen Hicks, Alastair Wilson

    What explains the outcomes of chance processes? We claim that their setups do. Chances, we think, mediate these explanations of outcome by setup but do not feature in them. Facts about chances do feature in explanations of a different kind: higher-order explanations, which explain how and why setups explain their outcomes. In this paper, we elucidate this 'mediator view' of chancy explanation and defend

  •   There is no measurement problem for Humeans
    Noûs Pub Date : 2021-10-11
    Chris Dorst

    The measurement problem concerns an apparent conflict between the two fundamental principles of quantum mechanics, namely the Schrödinger equation and the measurement postulate. These principles describe inconsistent behavior for quantum systems in so-called “measurement contexts.” Many theorists have thought that the measurement problem can only be resolved by proposing a mechanistic explanation of

  •   The proper role of history in evolutionary explanations
    Noûs Pub Date : 2021-10-11
    Thomas A. C. Reydon

    Evolutionary explanations are not only common in the biological sciences, but also widespread outside biology. But an account of how evolutionary explanations perform their explanatory work is still lacking. This paper develops such an account. I argue that available accounts of explanations in evolutionary science miss important parts of the role of history in evolutionary explanations. I argue that

  •   Transitional attitudes and the unmooring view of higher-order evidence
    Noûs Pub Date : 2021-10-06
    Julia Staffel

    This paper proposes a novel answer to the question of what attitude agents should adopt when they receive misleading higher-order evidence that avoids the drawbacks of existing views. The answer builds on the independently motivated observation that there is a difference between attitudes that agents form as conclusions of their reasoning, called terminal attitudes, and attitudes that are formed in

  •   No fact of the middle
    Noûs Pub Date : 2021-09-12
    Justin Khoo

    A middle fact is a true proposition about what would have happened had A been true (where A is in fact false), whose truth isn't entailed by any non-counterfactual facts. I argue that there are no middle facts; if there were, we wouldn't know them, and our ignorance of them would result in ignorance about whether regret is fitting in cases where we clearly know it is. But there's a problem. Consider

  •   Ignore risk; Maximize expected moral value
    Noûs Pub Date : 2021-09-07
    Michael Zhao

    Many philosophers assume that, when making moral decisions under uncertainty, we should choose the option that has the greatest expected moral value, regardless of how risky it is. But their arguments for maximizing expected moral value do not support it over rival, risk-averse approaches. In this paper, I present a novel argument for maximizing expected value: when we think about larger series of

  •   Communication before communicative intentions
    Noûs Pub Date : 2021-09-05
    Josh Armstrong

    This paper explores the significance of intelligent social behavior among non-human animals for philosophical theories of communication. Using the alarm call system of vervet monkeys as a case study, I argue that interpersonal communication (or what I call “minded communication”) can and does take place in the absence of the production and recognition of communicative intentions. More generally, I

  •   Problems for factive accounts of assertion
    Noûs Pub Date : 2021-08-26
    Sven Rosenkranz

    The knowledge account of assertion construes assertion as subject to constitutive norms. In its standard version, it combines a wide scope obligation not to assert p without knowing p, with narrow scope principles specifying conditions under which it is permissible to assert p, where the notions of obligation and permission are duals and behave uniformly for variable p. It is argued that, given natural

  •   Humean nomic essentialism
    Noûs Pub Date : 2021-08-14
    Harjit Bhogal, Zee R. Perry

    Humeanism – the idea that there are no necessary connections between distinct existences – and Nomic Essentialism – the idea that properties essentially play the nomic roles that they do – are two of the most important and influential positions in the metaphysics of science. Traditionally, it has been thought that these positions were incompatible competitors. We disagree. We argue that there is an

  •   Explaining normative reasons
    Noûs Pub Date : 2021-07-28
    Daniel Fogal, Olle Risberg

    In this paper, we present and defend a natural yet novel analysis of normative reasons. According to what we call support-explanationism, for a fact to be a normative reason to φ is for it to explain why there's normative support for φ-ing. We critically consider the two main rival forms of explanationism—ought-explanationism, on which reasons explain facts about ought, and good-explanationism, on

  •   Input and output in distributive theory
    Noûs Pub Date : 2021-07-16
    Nir Eyal, Anders Herlitz

    Distributive theories evaluate distributions of goods based on candidate recipients’ characteristics, e.g. how well off candidates are, how deserving they are, and whether they fare below sufficiency. But such characteristics vary across possible worlds, so distributive theories may differ in terms of the world which for them settles candidates’ characteristics. This paper examines how distributive

  •   Optimality justifications and the optimality principle: New tools for foundation-theoretic epistemology
    Noûs Pub Date : 2021-07-15
    Gerhard Schurz

    The background of this paper (section 1) consists in a new account to foundation-theoretic epistemology characterized by two features: (i) All beliefs are to be justified by deductive, inductive or abductive inferences from a minimalistic class of unproblematic (introspective or analytic) basic beliefs. (ii) Higher-order justifications for these inferences are given by means of the novel method of

  •   Arbitrariness and the long road to permissivism
    Noûs Pub Date : 2021-07-09
    Maegan Fairchild

    Radically permissive ontologies like mereological universalism and material plenitude are typically motivated by concerns about arbitrariness or anthropocentrism: it would be objectionably arbitrary, the thought goes, to countenance only those objects that we ordinarily take there to be. Despite the prevalence of this idea, it isn't at all clear what it is for a theory to be “objectionably arbitrary”

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