Against%20Ontologically%20Evil%20Misuse%20of%20Predicate%20Logic - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Against%20Ontologically%20Evil%20Misuse%20of%20Predicate%20Logic

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... a special case of linguistic Kantianism: the structure of language is they ... (more Kantianism) 14. F(a) To understand properties is to understand predication ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Against%20Ontologically%20Evil%20Misuse%20of%20Predicate%20Logic


1
Against Ontologically Evil Misuse of Predicate
Logic
  • Barry Smith
  • http//ontologist.com

2
Fantology
  • The syntax of first-order predicate logic is a
    mirror of reality
  • Fa (or Rab etc.) is the key to ontological
    structure
  • Fantology a special case of linguistic
    Kantianism the structure of language is they key
    to the structure of knowable reality

3
For the fantologist
  • F(a), R(a,b) is the language for ontology
  • This language reflects the structure of
    reality
  • Reality is made up of atoms plus abstract (1-
    and n-place) properties or attributes

4
David Armstrongs
  • spreadsheet ontology

5
F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
6
F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V
a x x x x x
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
7
F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V
a x x x x x
b x x x x x
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
8
F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V
a x x x x x
b x x x x x
c x x x x x
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
9
F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V
a x x x x x
b x x x x x
c x x x x x
d x x
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
and so on
10
Fantology
  • tends to make you believe in some future state of
    total science
  • when the values of F and a,
  • all of them,
  • will be revealed to the elect
  • (Neokantianism)

11
F(a)
  • All generality belongs to the predicate
  • a is a mere name
  • Contrast this with the way scientists use names
  • Yeast DNA-Binding Requirement
  • Ribosomal Protein Gene Promoter Sequence

12
a leaves no room for ontological complexity
  • Hence reality is made of atoms
  • Fantology cannot do justice to the existence of
    different levels of granularity on the side of
    reality
  • Thus conducive to reductionism in philosophy

13
F(a)
  • a is a bare name
  • various doctrines of bare particulars
  • including noumenal views as e.g. in the
  • Tractatus doctrine of simples
  • (more Kantianism)

14
F(a)
  • To understand properties is to understand
    predication
  • (effectively in terms of functional application à
    la Frege)

15
Aristotle distinguished
  • Predication in the category of substance
  • John is a man, Henry is an ox
  • Predication in the category of accident
  • John is hungry, Henry is asleep

16
For Fantology
  • no predication in the category of substance
  • e.g. Quine because there are no substances
  • or because the two types of predication are
    confused
  • or because the bareness of a yields an aversion
    to idea of substances as spatially extended and
    spatially located

17
Aristotles Ontological Square
Substantial Accidental
Second substance man cat ox Second accident headache sun-tan dread
First substance this man this cat this ox First accident this headache this sun-tan this dread
Universal
Particular
18
Aristotles Ontological Square
Substantial Accidental
Second substance man cat ox Second accident headache sun-tan dread
First substance this man this cat this ox First accident this headache this sun-tan this dread
Universal
Particular
19
Aristotles Ontological Square
Substantial Accidental
Second substance man cat ox Second accident headache sun-tan dread
First substance this man this cat this ox First accident this headache this sun-tan this dread
Universal
Particular
20
Aristotles Ontological Square
Substantial Accidental
Second substance man cat ox Second accident headache sun-tan dread
First substance this man this cat this ox First accident this headache this sun-tan this dread
Universal
Particular
21
Aristotles Ontological Square
Substantial Accidental
Second substance man cat ox Second accident headache sun-tan dread
First substance this man this cat this ox First accident this headache this sun-tan this dread
Universal
Particular
22
Standard Predicate Logic F(a), R(a,b) ...
Substantial Accidental
Attributes F, G, R
Individuals a, b, c this, that
Universal
Particular
23
Bicategorial Nominalism
Substantial Accidental

First substance this man this cat this ox First accident this headache this sun-tan this dread
Universal
Particular
24
Process Metaphysics, Trope Bundle Theories
Substantial Accidental

Events Processes Everything is flux
Universal
Particular
25
Fantology
  • (given its roots in mathematics)
  • has no satisfactory way of dealing with time
  • hence leads to banishment of time from the
    ontology
  • (as in Armstrongs or Quines four-dimensionalism)

26
F(a), R(a,b) adicity
  • all structures in reality have an adicity
  • -- tendency to deal inadequately not only with
    time and change but with continuous phenomena in
    general

27
F(a), R(a,b) adicity
  • John has a headache
  • What is the adicity of Johns headache (a
    relation ? between your consciousness and
    various processes taking place in an around your
    brain) ?

28
The extensionalist limitations of fantology
  • lead one into the temptations of possible world
    metaphysics
  • and other fantasies

29
Fantology leads you to talk nonsense about
family resemblances
30
Fantology
  • leads to a lazy use of the word property,
  • just about any old open sentence will serve to
    designate a property
  • ?-calculus property ontology as theft rather
    than honest toil

31
Fantology
  • leads to a lazy use of the word property,
  • (in this way, too, fantology is conducive to
    nominalism)

32
Booleanism
  • if F stands for a property and G stands for a
    property
  • then
  • FG stands for a property
  • FvG stands for a property
  • not-F stands for a property
  • F?G stands for a property
  • and so on

33
Strong Booleanism
  • There is a complete lattice of properties
  • self-identity
  • FvG
  • not-F F G
    not-G
  • FG
  • non-self-identity

34
Set theory is Booleanism unremediated
  • Booleanism without any remediating features
    whatsoever

35
Booleanism
  • responsible, among other things, for Russells
    paradox
  • Russells solution
  • Keep Boole
  • avoid the catastrophe by introducing the
    machinery of types

36
Booleanism
  • responsible for Russells paradox
  • and therefore also responsible for the phobia of
    quantification over properties
  • and thus in this respect, too, conducive to
    nominalism

37
Lewis and Armstrong
  • free from Booleanism
  • with their sparse theory of properties

38
That Lewis and Armstrong
  • arrived at their sparse view of properties
    against the solid wall of fantological Booleanist
    orthodoxy
  • is a miracle of modern intellectual history
  • analogous to two 5 stone weakling climbing up to
    breathe the free air at the top of Mount Everest
    with 1000 ton weights attached to their feet

39
leading them back, on this point,
  • to where Aristotelians were from the very
    beginning

40
  • END

41
FOLWUT
  • First-order logic with universal terms

42
Compare the syntax of set theory
  • ?(x,y)
  • one (formal) predicate

43
FOLWUT
  • (x,y)
  • Inst(x,u)
  • Does(x,e)
  • Part(x,y)
  • Inst(x,y)
  • Dep(x,y)
  • Isa(x,y)
  • Exemp(x,d)
  • Loc(x,y)

44
  • Inst(x,u)
  • no temptation to Booleanism
  • no temptation to Nominalism
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