estudos:markus-gabriel:markus-gabriel-2015-44-49-fato
Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
| estudos:markus-gabriel:markus-gabriel-2015-44-49-fato [15/01/2026 20:13] – created - external edit 127.0.0.1 | estudos:markus-gabriel:markus-gabriel-2015-44-49-fato [27/01/2026 06:17] (current) – mccastro | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
| + | ====== fato (2015: | ||
| + | |||
| + | //Data: 2024-01-11 13:03// | ||
| + | |||
| + | <tabbox destaque> | ||
| + | Por " | ||
| + | |||
| + | <tabbox original> | ||
| + | We saw how zoontology had to admit that there are some interest-independent facts grounding our specific interests. Both Meillassoux and Boghossian have recently made a compelling [45] case that no position in ontology or epistemology can avoid acknowledging absolute facts: Something is the case regardless of whether we acknowledge it or not, for even if almost all facts were interest-relative, | ||
| + | |||
| + | By ‘fact’ I refer to anything that is true of something. It is true of my left hand that it is right now typing this sentence. This fact is not identical with my left hand. My left hand and the facts within which it is embedded are different at least in that my left hand is embedded in many facts without therefore being many left hands. My mug stands on a saucer. This is a fact. That my mug stands on a saucer is neither my mug nor my saucer, but the fact that they are related in a certain way, that they stand in the relation of one standing on top of the other. It is a fact that 7+5=12 in that it is true of 7 and 5 that when they stand in the relevant relation of addition, they are equal to 12, that is, that a certain three-place relation holds between 7, 5 and 12. | ||
| + | |||
| + | This conception of facts differs from the traditional Russellian conception in many respects, most notably in that it attributes truth to the facts and not to a relation between facts and propositions. I refrain from the idea that facts are truth-makers such that they make some propositions true and some false. A true thought about an object that it is such and so is a fact as much as it is a fact that London is north of Italy, or that Mount Vesuvius is a volcano. The true thought that Mount Vesuvius is a volcano differs from the fact that Mount Vesuvius is a volcano, as Mount Vesuvius would have been a volcano had no one ever thought so. Nevertheless, | ||
| + | |||
| + | There are facts only if something or other is true of an object. Russell thinks that facts are independent from truth to the extent to which they allow for something to be true of an object (for propositions to be true or false). They make propositions true or false, but they are not themselves true or false. My view is that truth is not primarily a property of propositions, | ||
| + | |||
| + | As I will argue in more detail later, this preserves another valuable insight from Russell, namely his claim that no object just exists by itself. He famously makes an interesting case that ‘o exists’ is meaningless. One of his arguments is that every individual which has any properties whatsoever has to exist, so that denial of existence becomes pointless, as we can never deny the existence of a given individual. He believes that existence, therefore, is not a predicate in the ordinary sense, which is why he offers an alternative revisionary ontology. However, this opening move is problematic given that existence might still be a property that simply holds good of all objects. Why claim that there cannot be any properties that all objects necessarily have even though assertions in which this property figures as predicate violate our understanding of what it is to assert something? | ||
| + | |||
| + | Be that as it may, an interesting part of his argument that we do not say of individuals that they exist consists in his insight that there must be a reason why nothing exists without being determined as thus and so. For him, the reason for the fact that there is no undetermined existence, no sheer or purified being, as it were, is that claims of existence mean that a propositional function has values to the effect that it is sometimes true. It is sometimes true that ‘x is a bottle of beer’ because there are instantiations of ‘x’, such as that Negra Modelo bottle over there, which assign the truth-value true to the proposition ‘That Negra Modelo bottle over there is a bottle of beer.’ This view straightforwardly entails that there is nothing that does not have any properties whatsoever because existence is tied to propositional functions, and they always exhibit patterns of property-attribution. Of course, here a lot hinges on the question of why there would not be [47] a propositional function ‘x exists’ that is true for that Negra Modelo bottle over there and false for Indiana Jones (assuming we are not speaking about the movies)? Also, is Russell not ultimately committed to claiming that the relation between a propositional function and the instantiations which turn it into a true proposition only comes to be if someone holds beliefs that are at least either determinately true or determinately false? But this would amount to a crazy form of idealism, or at least ontological anti-realism, | ||
| + | |||
| + | Evidently, we must steer clear of the notion that nothing would have existed had no one had any beliefs about it, a proposition secretly driving modern ontology since Kant had suggested that to exist is to appear in the field of sense of possible experience, which will be discussed later. Any such theory of existence, that is to say ontology, will turn out to be incoherent as it will run into problems regarding the prior existence of objects and the obtaining of associated facts leading to something like creatures capable of truth-apt thought. We simply do not make it the case that generally or globally there is something rather than nothing because there is something about us (that we think or conceptually represent) that creates all the facts including those supposedly obtaining before or generally independent of our arrival. | ||
| + | |||
| + | According to the traditional model already to be found in Plato and Aristotle, the minimal requirement for there being facts is that some property is instantiated, | ||
| + | |||
| + | (CC) Had Britney not eaten the cheese, she might have chosen the ham instead. | ||
| + | |||
| + | are also facts, as they hold good of something or other, in this case of Britney, the cheese and the ham. (CC) has an internal structure characterising how things would have been had certain conditions been met. As I will argue in the modalities chapter, there are no absolute modalities. Modalities are as restricted as ordinary existential assertions, which means that we can legitimately regard (CC) as being about Britney, the cheese and the ham. (CC) describes a truth; it says what holds good of certain objects. To reduce facts to property instantiations or to any other logical equivalent of a grammatical structure we find in some natural language or other might be the right move at some point in a specific philosophical argument. But from an ontological point of view, identification of facts with property instantiation is prima facie unwarranted, | ||
| + | |||
| + | Given that we already know that even the most radically [49] anthropomorphic version of zoontology has to admit that there are interest-independent facts (at least the fact that all other facts, that is, almost all facts, are interest-relative), | ||
| + | |||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ---- | ||
| + | |||
| + | //PS: GABRIEL, Markus. Fields of Sense. A New Realist Ontology. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2015// | ||
estudos/markus-gabriel/markus-gabriel-2015-44-49-fato.txt · Last modified: by mccastro
