Endurantism and Temporal Gunk

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Endurantism and Temporal Gunk

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A thesis about concrete particulars and how they persist through time. ... Merricks, Trenton, 1994, 'Endurance and Indiscernibility', Journal of Philosophy, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Endurantism and Temporal Gunk


1
Endurantism and Temporal Gunk
  • Andrew Bacon,
  • Oxford University

2
What is endurantism?
  • A thesis about concrete particulars and how they
    persist through time.
  • The endurantist holds that at any given instant
    of time physical objects exist wholly in the
    sense that they, and all their parts, exist at
    that time.

3
Central tenets of endurantism
  • Physical objects are three dimensional.
  • Physical objects only have spatial parts.
  • Identity statements about objects at different
    times is to be interpreted as strict identity.
  • Physical objects are not extended in the temporal
    dimension.

4
Perdurantism
  • On the other side of the fence we have
    perdurantism. Perdurantists believe that
  • Physical objects are four dimensional worms
    (think Donnie Darko). It is sometimes called
    worm theory.
  • Identity statements across time are loose in the
    sense that you only need to ostensively pick out
    different parts of one object to make an identity
    assertion.

5
Temporal parts and Endurantism
  • Endurantists will typically claim that an object
    has different parts at different times.
  • Example on the 19th of May 1536 Anne Boleyn had
    a head, but on the 20th she did not.
  • These are not temporal parts in the traditional
    sense, all the endurantist is committed to is
    that it was the case that Anne Boleyn had a head

6
Whats the difference?
  • Perhaps the best way to explain the difference is
    to say that Perdurantists believe four
    dimensional entities, and Endurantists in three
    dimensional entities.

7
  • Is this necessary?
  • Surely an endurantist could believe in many (even
    infinitely many) spatial dimensions, or even many
    temporal dimensions.

8
Endurantism as a necessary truth
  • Claim Endurantism, if true at all, is
    necessarily true.
  • It is a claim about the nature of physical
    objects and time.
  • It ascribes a certain characteristic to an
    ontological category. If something falling under
    this category exists, then it must have this
    feature.

9
Structure of argument
  • If endurantism is true, it is necessarily true
  • There are possible worlds with certain exotic
    space times.
  • In these worlds endurantism is false.
  • Therefore endurantism is false. (contrapositive
    on 1.)

10
Mereology 1
  • First order language.
  • Only non logical symbol ?
  • x ? y is to be read as x is a part of y

11
Mereology 2
  • For convenience introduce the defined symbols
  • Overlap x ? y ? ?zz ? x ? z ? y
  • Disjoint x ? y ? x ? y
  • Proper Part x lt y ? x ? y ? x y

12
Axioms 1
  • Reflexivity
  • ?x x ? x
  • Anti-symmetry
  • ?x?yx ? y ? y ? x ? x y
  • Transitivity
  • ?x?y?zx ? y ? y ? z ? x ? z

13
Axioms 2
  • Supplementation
  • ?x?yy ? x ? ?zz ? y ? z ? x
  • Product
  • ?x?yx ? y ? ?z?ww ? z ? w ? x ? w ? y
  • Sum
  • ?x?y?zx ? z ? y ? z ? ?z?ww ? z ? w ? x ? w
    ? y

14
Axioms 3
  • If we want an even stronger mereology add the
    fusion axiom schema.
  • Unrestricted Fusion
  • ?x? ? ?!y?zz ? y ? ?x? ? x ? z
  • For any well formed formula ? with no free
    occurrences of y or z

15
Atoms and Gunk
  • Definition Call something an atom iff it has no
    proper parts
  • Definition Call something gunky iff all its
    parts have proper parts.

16
Axioms 4
  • Atoms
  • ?x?yy ? x ? ?zz lt y
  • Gunk
  • ?x?yy ? x ? ?zz lt y

17
Atoms and Gunk
  • Atoms says that every thing is made up of atoms
    simples which have no proper parts.
  • Gunk says that there are no atoms, everything is
    made up of gunk, which in turn is made up of more
    gunk and so on and so forth turtles all the
    way down.

18
Can we prove these assertions from preceding
axioms?
  • Atoms and Gunk are both independent of standard
    mereology.
  • Consider two models for Atoms take sets of
    points in Euclidean 3-space and subset as
    parthood, our atoms will then be the singleton
    sets. For Gunk take the non-empty open sets in
    Euclidean 3-space and subset as parthood.

19
Is gunk possible?
  • Gunk passes three great tests for possibility
  • Logically possible (we can provide a model for
    it, it is consistent).
  • Conceivable (it is frequently discussed in
    mereological literature.)
  • Physically serious (Leibniz thought our
    space-time was gunky!)

20
Gunky space-time
  • The obvious way to interpret the existence of
    gunk would be for the structure of space-time to
    be gunky. This idea dates back to the stoics, and
    can also be found in the writings of Whitehead.

21
  • To imagine gunky space-time we think in terms of
    the model given earlier non-empty open sets of
    space-time points.

22
Topological digression
  • A set X in 3-space is said to be open iff for all
    x ? X, we can find a ? ? R, such that B?(x) ? X
    where B?(x) is a sphere of radius ? gt 0 with
    centre x, called the epsilon ball around x.

23
Come again?
  • This basically says that no matter how close to
    the edge of the region you get, there is always
    room to wiggle in all directions and stay within
    the region.
  • It also means an open set is a region of space
    without a skin or a boundary. If an open set
    did contain its boundary then if you were on the
    boundary there would be some directions in which
    you could not wiggle.

24
A little observation
  • Lemma A non empty open set in n-dimensional
    space is extended in all n dimensions.
  • Proof Let X be a non empty open set. Since X is
    non empty it contains an element, x. By the
    openness property X contains an n-dimensional
    ball around x. (i.e. you can wiggle about in all
    dimensions around x and stay inside X). Therefore
    X is n-dimensional.

25
In terms of gunky space-time?
  • This means that if space-time is gunky then all
    regions (parts) of space-time are four
    dimensional (discounting the null object).

26
The Argument
  • Physical objects have spatial parts
  • If physical objects have spatial parts, they
    overlap with space-time.
  • All parts of space-time are four-dimensional (by
    lemma).
  • Therefore, physical objects will have
    four-dimensional parts (and hence temporal parts).

27
Objections
  • Endurantists treat time as fundamentally
    different from space.
  • Argument makes essential use of 4D talk.

28
Temporal Gunk
  • Suppose we respect the endurantist notion of time
    and focus just on the possibility of temporal
    gunk.
  • We can let space can be gunky or have atoms, it
    doesnt matter.
  • Question is endurantism consistent with such a
    possibility?

29
Problems
  • For a physical object, x, the endurantist claims
    that at any instant t, x is wholly present at t.
  • But if time were gunky there would be no
    instants! (only periods or intervals of time)

30
How do we phrase the endurantist position in gunk
time?
  • Merricks suggests we analyse x is wholly present
    at t as all of xs parts exist when time t is
    present
  • Firstly there are problems with the notion of
    present in gunky time. If the interval (a, b)
    is present, why is it that intervals contained in
    or containing (a, b) are not present. Perhaps
    there is no unique present? These matters seem to
    pose problems for presentism or even the
    possibility of gunk time depending on your
    sympathies

31
How do we phrase the endurantist position in gunk
time?
  • Secondly, if we run Merricks analysis on
    intervals it sounds like were committed to
    temporal parts.
  • all of xs parts exist when interval (a, b) is
    present
  • Lastly, if these kinds of analysis fail, then the
    notion of time indexed properties breaks down
    completely for the endurantist.

32
What next for the endurantist?
  • Two strategies suggest themselves naturally
  • Deny the possibility of temporal gunk.
  • An interesting response would be to deny that
    physical objects have spatial parts.

33
The second option
  • Simons discusses the possibility of extended
    simples. (Get references off me later.)
  • That objects and space-time do not overlap also
    seems to be entailed by relationism about
    space-time.

34
Conclusion
  • Whether or not such theories will stand up to
    scrutiny is an open question, however, for those
    of us who cannot stomach this rather radical
    notion of extended simples, there are few options
    but to accept temporal parts.

35
References
  • Hawley, Katharine, 2004, Temporal Parts,
    Stanford Encyclopedia Of Philosophy
  • Heller, Mark, 1984, "Temporal Parts of
    Four-Dimensional Objects", Philosophical Studies,
    46 323-334.
  • Lewis, D. K., 1991, Parts of Classes, Oxford
    Blackwell.
  • Merricks, Trenton, 1994, "Endurance and
    Indiscernibility", Journal of Philosophy, 91
    165-84.
  • Needham P., 1981, Temporal Intervals and
    Temporal Order, Logique et Analyse 24 4964.
  • Simons, Peter, 1987, Parts A Study in Ontology,
    Oxford Clarendon.
  • Simons, Peter, 2004, Extended Simples A Third
    Way Between Atoms and Gunk, The Monist 87
    371-84
  • van Benthem, J, 1983, The Logic of Time,
    Dordrecht Reidel (1991)
  • Whitehead A.N., 1929, Process and Reality, New
    York Macmillan
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