
Claims About What Is Metaphysically Necessary Or Possible Have Long Played A Central Role In Metaphysics And Other Areas Of Philosophy. Such Claims Are Traditionally Thought Of As Aiming To Describe A Special Kind Of Modal Fact Or Property, Or Perhaps Facts About Other Possible Worlds. But That Assumption Leads To Difficult Ontological, Epistemological, And Methodological Puzzles. Should We Accept That There Are Modal Facts Or Properties, Or Other Possible Worlds? If So, What Could These Things Be? How Could We Come To Know What The Modal Facts Or Properties Are? How Can We Resolve Philosophical Debates About What Is Metaphysically Necessary Or Possible? Norms And Necessity Develops A New Approach To Understanding Our Claims About Metaphysical Possibility And Necessity: Modal Normativism. The Normativist Rejects The Assumption That Modal Claims Aim To Describe Modal Features Or Possible Worlds, Arguing Instead That They Serve As Useful Ways Of Conveying, Reasoning With, And Renegotiating Semantic Rules And Their Consequences. By Dropping The Descriptivist Assumption, The Normativist Is Able To Unravel The Notorious Ontological Problems Of Modality, And Provide A Clear And Plausible Story About How We Can Come To Know What Is Metaphysically Necessary Or Possible. Most Importantly, This Approach Helps Demystify Philosophical Methodology. It Reveals That Resolving Metaphysical Modal Questions Does Not Require A Special Form Of Philosophical Insight Or Intuition. Instead, It Requires Nothing More Mysterious Than Empirical Knowledge, Conceptual Mastery, And An Ability To Explicitly Convey And Renegotiate Semantic Rules.
This book investigates the core question of how to understand claims regarding metaphysical necessity and possibility without relying on traditional, problematic assumptions about modal facts or possible worlds. Amie L. Thomasson, a prominent philosopher of language and ontology, utilizes a framework of modal normativism to argue that modal claims function as tools for conveying and negotiating semantic rules. By shifting the focus from descriptive metaphysics to normative linguistic practice, the author provides a methodology for resolving philosophical debates through empirical knowledge and conceptual mastery rather than intuition.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in contemporary analytic philosophy recognize this work as a significant contribution to the ongoing debate regarding the nature of modality and philosophical methodology. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which requires a strong background in meta-ontology and the philosophy of language to fully grasp the implications of the author's arguments.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190098201
ISBN-13:
9780190098209
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