Talk:Problem of future contingents
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What a load of ...
"Something will not happen tomorow. Therefore this (first) statement was true yesterday."
Really? It does not implies it. The battle could have been today and first statement still stays true. BUT! First statement says nothing about past. This whole implication is wrong.
Of course if this whole things is not about "we cannot live in tomorow" because we live only in today. 86.61.232.26 (talk) 14:16, 16 April 2009 (UTC)
- You'll find a lot of odd reasoning in the ancient philosophers; probably because they learned philosophy from a few masters only, while we have access to the thoughts of thousands upon thousands (thanks, Gutenberg!)
- However, what he's actually talking about is that truth statements in classical logic are invariant over time. If the proposition that the Earth is round is true, then it is also true tomorrow and it was also true yesterday; or stating it more accurately, classical logic does not concern itself with the concept of time. Also, it helps that the ancient Greeks had a tense that they could use specifically for timeless truths, whereas we have to do with the present, which implies a boundary in time.
- There are some logical calculi which can be used to model propositions that vary over time, should one need them. They are all twentieth-Century inventions, though.
- That being said, the problem as stated has a fault even in classical logic, which lies in the use of tomorrow. Even though the proposition is invariantly true, every day one enunciates the proposition, it refers to a slightly different proposition compared to the one enunciated the day before. Specifically, if I say there won't be a sea battle tomorrow, I am saying the same thing as there won't be a sea battle in the twenty-fourth; Tomorrow, when I say the same words, I'm actually saying the same thing as there won't be a sea battle in the twenty-fifth, and these two prepositions, one referring to the twenty-fourth and one to the twenty-fifth, may have differing truth-values. Wtrmute (talk) 21:50, 23 June 2009 (UTC)
Interpretive issue
Does Aristotle deny bivalence, or is he denying excluded middle, or both? These options should be carefully separated.Pruss (talk) 14:46, 17 August 2011 (UTC)
A Question
Imagine the following universe:
- "Moment X"=TRUE; "There's light"=FALSE; "The fact is empirically true"=TRUE
- "Moment X"=FALSE; "There's light"=TRUE; "The fact is empirically true"=TRUE
- Any other combination between "Moment X" and "There's light"...; "The fact is empirically true"=FALSE
Considering this universe, what sense makes the expression ("There's light" AND NOT("There's light"))?
(Also posted at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Contradiction#A_Question) --Faustnh (talk) 22:13, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
Move
I propose moving the current article Problem of future contingents to Future contingent, since future contingent is widely used in the literature in such contexts as Medieval Theories of Future Contingents or talk of future contingent sentences/propositions/statements (e.g., in Putnam, 1967, 'Time and physical geometry'; or Mignucci, 1996, 'Ammonius on Future Contingent Propositions'). It also makes sense to me to introduce what a future contingent is before saying what the problem is. Objections? — Charles Stewart (talk) 08:27, 10 July 2009 (UTC)
Careful. 'Future contingents' is a direct importation into English of the Latin plural 'futura contingentia'. The Latin plural form nearly always refers to future contingent events or propositions, and is found in discussions of God's foreknowledge in tracts like Ockhams 'De futuris contingentibus'. The Latin singular form nearly always refers to a proposition, and is usually in the ablative form, as in 'de contingenti', meaning a contingent proposition. The English tends to reflect this - Googling the plural 'future contingents' returns the stuff about God's foreknowledge, Googling the singular 'future contingent' gives stuff about propositions. Note also that the English plural usage is normally a noun, whereas the plural usage is normally an adjective. (The SEP article throughout conforms to this convention).
Thus it would be odd to have the article titled 'Future contingent' as the English singular naturally suggests the adjectival use. 'Future contingents' would be OK. As you say, the article should introduce what future contingents are before saying what the problem is. Peter Damian (talk) 16:45, 13 July 2009 (UTC)
- The following two sentences seem natural to me:
- Note that the last proposition is a future contingent.
- We are interested principally in the domain of the future contingent.
- So I think the singular form can be used as a noun. There's a WP article naming policy that says to prefer the singular, because you can usually add the -s to get the plural form without an additional redirect. I lean to the singular, even if it might sound slightly artificial, since we can phrase the lede how we like. — Charles Stewart (talk) 07:07, 14 July 2009 (UTC)
Sorry, don't agree. My golden and never to be broken rule is that what is Wikipedia should never be far from anything in a standard reference work. Wikipedia should not be an outlier. Thus, if we look at the SEP, there are 28 occurences of 'future contingents' in the plural form, i.e. as a noun, including some important articles from the literature. There are 20 occurrences in the singular form, but always as an adjective qualifying a singular or plural noun. Specifically 9 occurrences of 'future contingent proposition', 8 occurrences of 'future contingent statement', 2 of 'future contingent event' and 1 of 'future contingent prediction'. If you can find important and significant uses of the singular noun in this context, let me know. Otherwise the article could be called 'future contingent proposition', but then you lose the ambiguity of the plural form, which sometimes means 'event', other times 'proposition' or 'statement'. I appreciate that Wikipedia has a policy on use of the singular, but that does not require us to have articles on 'scissor', 'trouser' or 'pant'.
On your first example above, 'future contingent' is clearly elliptical for 'future contingent proposition' Peter Damian (talk) 11:41, 14 July 2009 (UTC)
- I'll look a bit more for natural examples. I agree that my first example is an ellipsis, though I managed to convince myself that it wasn't before posting.
- Peter Øhrstrøm, 2009, In Defence of the Thin Red Line: A Case for Ockhamism contains "There are future contingents. But no future contingent is true." (p20). — Charles Stewart (talk) 13:57, 14 July 2009 (UTC)
- Well I won't die in a ditch for it. Interesting paper by the way - I will add it to the list. Peter Damian (talk) 16:06, 14 July 2009 (UTC)
Aristotle vs Diodorus
From [1]:
“ | Sorabji has suggested that it is, for reasons of intellectual economy, attractive to rule out the possibility that the neither Aristotle's argument against the fatalist nor the Master Argument was a response to the other. [...] Now it has been made very likely by Sedley, on the basis of historical considerations, that Diodorus was a younger contemporary of Aristotle's than had previously been supposed, and hence if we respect Sorabji's constraint, we should conclude that the Master Argument was probably a response to Aristotle.
Purely logical considerations certainly make it unlikely that DI 9 was intended as a response to Diodorus. [next page] But I have argued that it is unlikely that Diodorus himself intended his Argument to run on temporally definite expressions, or that that he noticed its implicit commitment to necessitarianism. So it is most likely that neither the Master Argument nor DI 9 was directly conceived in opposition to the the other, and hence that Sorabji's proposed constraint should be rejected. [conclusion] Instead of identifying the possible with what is and will be true, Diodorus now merely identifies it with what is or will be true. However this may be, Diodorus' attempt to prove that all possibilities will in time be realised still presumes that no one will question the principle of bivalence. Aristotle meanwhile has dared to do just that. |
” |
-- Tijfo098 (talk) 22:00, 10 April 2011 (UTC)
More than one problem
There is actually more than one problem called this way (albeit they are related) [2]. This article needs a lot of work. Tijfo098 (talk) 22:44, 10 April 2011 (UTC)