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Magic, worlds, numbers, and sets

In On the Plurality or Worlds, Lewis argues that any account of what possible worlds are should explain why possible worlds represent what they represent. I am never quite sure what to make of this point. On the one hand, I have sympathy for the response that possible worlds are ways things might be; they are not things that somehow need to encode or represent how things might be. On the other hand, I can (dimly) see Lewis's point: if we have in our ontology an entity called 'the possibility that there are talking donkeys', surely the entity must have certain features that make it deserve that name. In other words, there should be an answer to the question why this particular entity X, rather than that other entity Y, is the possibility that there are talking donkeys.

The meaning of 'London'

Noam Chomsky's New Horizons in the Study of Language and Mind contains a famous passage about London.

Referring to London, we can be talking about a location or area, people who sometimes live there, the air above it (but not too high), buildings, institutions, etc., in various combinations (as in 'London is so unhappy, ugly, and polluted that it should be destroyed and rebuilt 100 miles away', still being the same city). Such terms as 'London' are used to talk about the actual world, but there neither are nor are believed to be things-in-the-world with the properties of the intricate modes of reference that a city name encapsulates. (p.37)

I don't know what Chomsky is trying to say here, but there is something in the vicinity of his remark that strikes me as true and important. The point is that the reference of 'London' is a complex and subtle matter that is completely obscured when we say that 'London' refers to London.

Please, don't put your papers on acedemia.edu

Every now and then, I come across a link to a paper on academia.edu that looks interesting. I myself don't have an account on academia.edu, and I don't want one. This means that in order to look at the paper, I have to go through the following process.

  1. I click "Download (pdf)".
  2. I get confronted with the message: "You must be logged in to download". I can choose to "connect" with Facebook or Google or create an account manually.
  3. I choose the third option, since I don't want academia.edu to access my Google profile (and I don't have a Facebook account).
  4. Now I have to fill in a form asking for "First Name", "Last Name", "Email" and "Password". I enter random expletives in all the fields because I don't want an academia account, I just want to see the bloody paper.
  5. After submitting that form, I get asked whether I have coauthored a paper in a peer-reviewed journal. I choose "No", fearing that otherwise I'll have to answer more questions about those papers.
  6. Next I'm asked to upload my papers. I don't want to upload any papers, so I click "Skip this step".
  7. Next I have to fill in my university affiliation: "University", "URL", "Department", "Position". I enter random expletives.
  8. Next comes a form where I have to enter my "Research Interests". I enter some expletives. (Turns out my expletives are a popular research interest, shared with 32 others.)
  9. Next I'm told again to "connect" with Facebook, even though I already chose not to at the start. I click "I don't have a Facebook account".
  10. Now, finally, I am presented with a link to the paper I wanted to have a look at.

As you can imagine, I rarely go through all that hassle. Usually I look around if I can find the paper somewhere else and give up if I can't.

Centred propositions and objective epistemology

Given some evidence E and some proposition P, we can ask to what extent E supports P, and thus to what extent an agent should believe P if their only relevant evidence is E. The question may not always have a precise answer, but there are both intuitive and theoretical reasons to assume that the question is meaningful – that there is a kind of (imprecise) "evidential probability" conferred by evidence on propositions. That's why it makes sense to say, for example, that one should proportion one's beliefs to one's evidence.

Stalnaker on self-location II

In 2008, I wrote a post on Stalnaker on self-location, in which I attributed a certain position to Stalnaker and raised some objections. But the position isn't actually Stalnaker's. (It might be closer to Chisholm's). So here is another attempt at figuring out Stalnaker's view. (I'm mostly drawing on chapter 3 of Our Knowledge of the internal world (2008), chapter 5 of Context (2014), and a forthcoming paper called "Modeling a perspective on the world" (2015).)

Lewis's argument for Humility

In "Ramseyan Humility", Lewis argues for a thesis he calls "Humility". He never quite says what that thesis is, but its core seems to be the claim that our evidence can never rule out worlds that differ from actuality merely by swapping around fundamental properties. Lewis's argument, on pp.205-207, is perhaps the most puzzling argument he ever gave.

Lewis begins with some terminology.

A note on the scaling of desirability

In The Logic of Decision, Richard Jeffrey pointed out that the desirability (or "news value") of a proposition can be usefully understood as a weighted average of the desirability of different ways in which the proposition can be true, weighted by their respective probability. That is, if A and B are incompatible propositions, then

(1) Des(AvB) = Des(A)P(A/AvB) + Des(B)P(B/AvB).

So desirabilities are affected by probabilities. If you prefer A over B and just found out that conditional on their disjunction, A is more likely then B, then the desirability of the disjunction goes up. That seems right.

Owned possibility and unowned ability

Superficially, modal auxiliaries such as 'must', 'may', 'might', or 'can' seem to be predicate operators. So it is tempting to interpret them as functions from properties to properties: just as 'Alice jumps' attributes to Alice the property of jumping, 'Alice can jump' attributes to her the property of being able to jump, 'Alice may jump' attributes the property of being allowed to jump, and so on.

Perhaps the biggest obstacle to this approach comes from quantified constructions. If 'Alice may jump' attributes to Alice the property of being allowed to jump, then 'one of us may jump' should say that one of us has the property of being allowed to jump. But while this is one possible reading of the sentence, 'one of us may jump' also has a reading on which it states that it is permissible that one of us jumps. There is a kind of de re/de dicto ambiguity here, which suggests that 'may' can not only apply to properties but also to propositions.

Does subjective uncertainty objectively matter?

Let's say that an act A is subjectively better than an alternative B if A is better in light of the agent's information; A is objectively better if it is better in light of all the facts. The distinction is easiest to grasp in a consequentialist setting. Here an act is objectively better if it brings about more good -- if it saves more lives, for example. A morally conscientious agent may not know which of her options would bring about more good. Her subjective ranking of the options might therefore go by the expectation of the good: by the probability-weighted average of the good each act might bring about.

Abstracts on the Philosopher's Index

"The Philosopher's Index" is a commercial software once widely used to search for articles in philosophy journals. These days it is generally easier and faster to search on the open internet. (Even the company behind the Philosopher's Index is not quite sure why the Index is still needed.) However, there is one thing the Index has that can't be found anywhere else: many of its entries contain abstracts of books and articles, apparently provided by the authors themselves. These abstracts are often not part of the published versions, and they can be quite useful to get an authoritative summary, or to see what the author considered to be the main point of a paper.

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