What is Possible?

Abstract

This paper argues that there are true synthetic modal claims and that modal questions in philosophy in general are to be interpreted not in terms of logical necessity but in terms of synthetic necessity. I begin by sketching the debate about modality between logical positivism and phenomenology. Logical empiricism taught us to equate being tautological with being necessary. The common view is that tautologies are necessary in the narrow sense but that there is also necessity in a wider sense. I argue against this that we should distinguish necessity from analyticity and possibility from consistency.

Author's Profile

Daniel von Wachter
International Academy of Philosophy In The Principality of Liechtenstein

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2010-02-09

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