Abstract
The central question of ontology has long been thought to be ‘What is there?’.
The central way of answering it has been to consider which entities we must posit as part
of a best total explanatory theory. This paper argues against this ‘explanatory’ conception
of metaphysics, by showing that it relies on an unarticulated assumption that all the terms
at issue in these metaphysical debates serve an explanatory function. Making use of work
in systemic functional linguistics enables us to identify the many different functions played
by terms of interest in metaphysics. And that makes it clear that ‘contribution of explanatory
power’ should be rejected as an across-the-board criterion in ontology. This work in functional
linguistics also enables us to see why it is useful to have a language that entitles us to use
redundant inferences to introduce terms for properties, numbers, and the like, giving us new
reason to accept ‘easy’ inferences that there are such things. As a result, we should give up
thinking that ‘what is there?’ provides a deep and interesting question for a discipline called
‘ontology’ to answer, and give up thinking that the task for ontology is to determine which
entities to ‘posit’ as part of a best total explanatory theory.