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[[Image:Sanzio 01 Plato Aristotle.jpg|thumb|250px|[[Plato]] and [[Aristotle]] (right), by [[Raphael]] (Stanza della Segnatura, [[Rome]]). Aristotle is regarded as the "father" of metaphysics.]]
 
[[Image:Sanzio 01 Plato Aristotle.jpg|thumb|250px|[[Plato]] and [[Aristotle]] (right), by [[Raphael]] (Stanza della Segnatura, [[Rome]]). Aristotle is regarded as the "father" of metaphysics.]]
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'''Metaphysics''' ([[Greek language|Greek]]: ''μετά (meta)''="after," ''φυσικά (phisiká)''="those on nature," derived from the arrangement of [[Aristotle]]'s works) is the branch of [[philosophy]] concerned with explaining the nature of the most fundamental aspects of the world. It addresses questions such as: What is the nature of reality? Does the world exist outside the mind? What is the nature of objects, events, places? Is [[free will]] possible in a world governed by [[causality|causal laws]]?
  
'''Metaphysics''' ( [[Greek language|Greek]]: ''μετά (meta)'' = "after", ''φυσικά (phisiká)'' = "those on nature", derived from the arrangement of [[Aristotle]]'s works in antiquity) is the branch of philosophy concerned with explaining the nature of the most fundamental aspects of the world. It addresses questions such as: What is the nature of reality? Does the world exist outside the mind? What is the nature of objects, events, places?  Is free will possible in a world governed by causal laws?
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A central part of metaphysics is [[ontology]], which is the study of [[being]]. Ontology is, one might say, an attempt to determine what the most basic building blocks are, out of which the rest of reality is constructed. Philosophers of different times have shown different levels of optimism with respect to how much ontology can accomplish. It appears that [[Plato]], for instance, thought that ontology is capable of showing the existence of entities that are outside of the sensible world, but play some key role in determining the nature of that world. Many philosophers in the twentieth century, however, saw ontology as, at best, an attempt to understand the relations within a certain set of concepts used, such as that of [[substance]], property, and relation.
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{{toc}}
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It is important to distinguish the sense of "metaphysics" employed by philosophers from its recent association with [[spirituality]] and world-transcending thought, though the latter does stem from developments in the former. Because metaphysics concerns itself with fundamental questions, nearly every major philosopher has devoted a certain amount of thought to metaphysics. This means, however, that a history of metaphysics would be little less than a history of all of philosophy. This article will, therefore, survey the issues that have most concerned metaphysicians throughout history. A list of historical figures especially worth considering is provided at the end.
  
A central part of metaphysics is [[ontology]], which is aims to understand which things exist. Ontology is, one might say, an attempt to determine what the most basic building blocks are out of which the rest of reality is constructed. Philosophers of different times have shown different levels of optimism with respect to how much ontology can accomplish.  [[Plato]], for instance, appears to have thought that it is capable of showing the existence of entities which are outside of the sensible world, but which play some key role in determining the nature of that world. Many philosophers in the 20th century, however, saw ontology as, at best, an attempt to understand the relations between a certain set of concepts we use, such as that of substance, property and relation.
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==Five central questions of metaphysics==
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===Mind and matter===
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One of the central issues in metaphysics concerns how to understand the relation between minds and the world in which they exist. More specifically: Whether the most basic constituents of mind and the world were one and the same. [[Democritus]] and [[Epicurus]], for instance, claimed that the world was fundamentally made up of indivisible particles, but held that the mind was simply a special sort of particle. [[Descartes]] held that the material world was composed of material substance, and so fundamentally unlike the intellectual substance that was minds. [[Spinoza]] and [[Leibniz]] claimed that all of the finite world had both a physical and an intellectual aspect—so that even the most simple physical particle in some sense had a mind. An even more radical position is that of [[Berkeley]], who claimed that the material world is nothing more than ideas.
  
It is important to distinguish the sense of 'metaphysics' employed by philosophers from a different sense it has acquired relatively recently: one associated with spirituality and world-transcending thought.  Though the latter usage has its historical roots in the former, almost all contemporary metaphysicians cringe when they walk by the 'Metaphysics' section of bookstores.
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The root issue is that, in the task of trying to understand what the world is made up of, the metaphysician is faced with the fact that minds and matter appear to have very different natures. One is conscious, the other isn't. One appears to be divisible and complex, whereas the other seems simple. Yet the two also appear to interact, and it is plausible (as Spinoza explicitly states in Book 1 of his ''Ethics'') that only things with something in common can interact. Further, one intuitively believes oneself to possess at least ''some'' knowledge about the nature of the world (especially as the result of science), and this seems to require that the divide between mind and world not go too deep.
 
 
Because it concerns itself with fundamental questions, nearly every major philosopher has devoted a certain amount of thought to metaphysics.  This means, however, that a history of metaphysics would be little less than a history of all of philosophy.  This article will therefore survey the issues that have most concerned metaphysicians throughout history.  A list of historical figures especially worth considering is provided at the end.
 
 
 
==Central questions of metaphysics==
 
 
 
 
 
===Mind and Matter===
 
 
 
One of the central issues in metaphysics concerns how to understand the relation between minds and the world they exist in.  More specifically: whether the most basic constituents of mind and the world were one and the same.  [[Democritus]] and [[Epicurus]], for instance, claimed that the world was fundamentally made up of indivisible particles, but held that the mind was simply a special sort of particle.  [[Descartes]] held that the material world was composed of material substance, and so fundamentally unlike the intellectual substance that was minds.  [[Spinoza]] and [[Leibniz]] claimed that all of the finite world had both physical and an intellectual aspects - so that even the most simply physical particle in some sense had a mind.  An even more radical position is that of [[Berkeley]], who claimed that the material world is nothing more than ideas.
 
 
 
The root issue is that, in the task of trying to understand what the world is made up of, the metaphysician is faced with the fact that minds and matter appear to have very different natures. One is conscious, the other isn't. One appears to be divisible and complex, whereas the other seems simple. Yet the two also appear to interact, and it is plausible (as Spinoza explicitly states in Book 1 of his ''Ethics'') that only things with something in common can interact. Further, we intuitively take ourselves to possess at least ''some'' knowledge about the nature of the world (especially as the result of science), and this seems to require that the divide between mind and world not go too deep.
 
 
 
See also [[Appearance and Reality]] and [[philosophy of mind]].
 
  
 
===Objects and their properties===
 
===Objects and their properties===
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In looking at objects in the world, one often will look for things they "have something in common." For instance, one might say that two apples have the same color, that two people are the same height, or that two books have the same number of chapters. But what is the nature of these entities that are "had in common?" They do not appear to be particular objects—these claims are not like the statement that two people might have a friend in common. The things appear to be "universal," not particular, in that they can be fully present in many things.
  
In looking at objects in the world, we often will look for things they 'have something in common.'  For instance, we might say that two apples have the same color, that two people are the same height, or that two books have the same number of chapters.  But what is the nature of these entities that are 'had in common'?  They do not appear to be particular objects - these claims are not like the statement that two people might have a friend in common.  The things appear to be 'universal,' not particular, in that they can be fully present in many things.
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There are two related questions one might raise about universals like redness, roundness, etc. The first concerns their ontological status: In what way do these things exist?  For instance, would redness still exist even if there weren't any particular objects that were red? After all, people don't think that destroying one red thing has any effect on redness itself, so why would the destruction of all of them do so? But if redness could exist without any particular red objects, then it must in some way be independent of them. This points to the second question: What is the relation between universals and particulars? Are particular objects something more than just a sum of universals, and if so, what? This latter question has a close relation to the issue of change.
 
 
There are two related questions one might raise about universals like redness, roundness, etc. The first concerns their ontological status: in what way do these things exist?  For instance, would redness still exist even if there weren't any particular objects that were red? After all, we don't think that destroying one red thing has any effect on redness itself, so why would the destruction of all of them do so? But if redness could exist without any particular red objects, then it must in some way be independent of them. This points to the second question: what is the relation between universals and particulars? Are particular objects something more than just a sum of universals, and if so, what? This latter question has a close relation to the issue of change (discussed below).
 
  
The most extended discussions of this problem in ancient philosophy are found in the dialogues of [[Plato]] (in particular, the ''Parmenides''). In much of his work, Plato argues that universals are ''more real'' than particulars, and philosophers who defend the claim that universals have some sort of independent existence are often called 'Platonists.' The opposing view, called 'nominalism,' holds that universals exist only in name - in other words, that we merely have words that are applicable to many objects, but that there is no sense in which the words refer to some entities that are separate from particular objects.
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The most extended discussions of this problem in ancient philosophy are found in the dialogues of [[Plato]] (in particular, the ''Parmenides''). In much of his work, Plato argues that universals are ''more real'' than particulars, and as such philosophers who defend the claim that universals have some sort of independent existence are often called "Platonists." The opposing view, called "[[nominalism]]," holds that universals exist only in name--in other words, that humans merely have words that are applicable to many objects, but that there is no sense in which the words refer to some entities that are separate from particular objects.
 
 
See also [[Universals]].
 
  
 
=== Identity and change ===
 
=== Identity and change ===
 
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Puzzles associated with change go back at least to [[Heraclitus]]' famous claim that "you cannot step into the same river twice." As it is most often interpreted, Heraclitus is making the following point: Given that there is a single river from moment to moment, since there is a change in what is present (for instance, a difference in water levels), it cannot be strictly true that the ''same'' river is there. That is, consider the following two claims:
Puzzles associated with change go back at least to [[Heraclitus]]' famous claim that "you cannot step into the same river twice"As it is most often interpreted, Heraclitus is making the following point: we take there to be a single river from moment to moment, but since there is a change in what is present (for instance, a difference in water levels), it cannot be strictly true that the ''same'' river is there. That is, consider the following two claims:
 
  
 
#The river has the property of being 4 meters deep on Tuesday
 
#The river has the property of being 4 meters deep on Tuesday
#The river has the property of being 3.5 meters deep on Wednesday.
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#The river has the property of being 3.5 meters deep on Wednesday
 
 
But since no river can be ''both'' 4 meters deep and 3.5 meters deep, it would seem that the river we find on Tuesday cannot be the river we find on Wednesday.
 
 
 
One option is to accept the claim that the same river cannot be present at two times if there is any change.  Yet this would lead us to claim that very few of the things we thought lasted through time do, since almost everything in the universe undergoes at least ''some'' change from moment to moment.  Many philosophers have therefore tried to find ways to vindicate our talk of persisting objects that don't involve the unacceptable claim that the same object can have incompatible properties.
 
  
One option is to deny that it is correct to say that (for instance) the river has both the property of being 4 meters deep and the property of being 3.5 meters deep, since those properties are incompatible.  Rather, one might insist, the river has two properties that can be described by the phrases 'being 4 meters deep on Tuesday' and 'being 3.5 meters deep on Wednesday.'  The properties described by those phrases are obviously compatible.  We might describe this solution as one of time-relativizing the properties themselves.
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But since no river can be ''both'' 4 meters deep and 3.5 meters deep, it would seem that the river found on Tuesday cannot be the river found on Wednesday.
  
Another option is to see the object as broken down into 'time-slices.'  The river is then seen as some sort of composite of slices that might be referred to by phrases such as 'the river on Tuesday' and 'the river on Wednesday.'  On this view, it's not strictly true that the properties of being being 4 meters deep and of being 3.5 meters deep are ascribed to the ''same'' object. Rather, they are ascribed to different objects (the time-slices), which are components of some larger bobject.  This solution can be described as time-relativizing the objects.
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One option is to accept the claim that the same river cannot be present at two times if there is any change. Yet this would lead one to claim that very few of the things one thought lasted through time do, since almost everything in the universe undergoes at least ''some'' change from moment to moment. Many philosophers have therefore tried to find ways to vindicate talk of persisting objects that don't involve the unacceptable claim that the same object can have incompatible properties.
  
A third option is to relativize the ''relation'' between the object and the property. On this view, the above statements should be recast as: "The river is-on-Tuesday 4 meters deep" and "The river is-on-Wednesday 3.5 meters deep."
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One option is to deny that it is correct to say that (for instance) the river has both the property of being 4 meters deep and the property of being 3.5 meters deep, since those properties are incompatible. Rather, one might insist, the river has two properties that can be described by the phrases "being 4 meters deep on Tuesday" and "being 3.5 meters deep on Wednesday." The properties described by those phrases are obviously compatible. One might describe this solution as one of time-relativizing the properties themselves.
  
Though these distinctions seem overly subtle, the ramifications of the choice are very significant, for this is a choice about how to understand one of the most fundamental features of the universe: change.
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Another option is to see the object as broken down into "time-slices." The river is then seen as some sort of composite of slices that might be referred to by phrases such as "the river on Tuesday" and "the river on Wednesday." In this view, it's not strictly true that the properties of being being 4 meters deep and of being 3.5 meters deep are ascribed to the ''same'' object. Rather, they are ascribed to different objects (the time-slices), which are components of some larger object. This solution can be described as time-relativizing the objects.
  
===Space and time===
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A third option is to relativize the ''relation'' between the object and the property. In this view, the above statements should be recast as: "The river is—onTuesday—4 meters deep" and "The river is—on Wednesday—3.5 meters deep." 
{{See also|Philosophy of space and time|Spacetime}}
 
  
A traditional [[Philosophical realism|realist]] position in ontology is that time and space have existence apart from the human mind. [[Idealists]], including [[Kant]] claim that space and time are mental constructs used to organise perceptions, or are otherwise unreal.
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Though these distinctions seem overly subtle, the ramifications of the choice are very significant, for this is a choice about how to understand one of the most fundamental features of the universe: Change.
  
Suppose that one is sitting at a table, with an apple in front of him or her;  the apple exists in [[space]] and in [[time]], but what does this statement indicate?  Could it be said, for example, that space is like an invisible three-dimensional grid in which the apple is positioned? Suppose the apple, and all physical objects in the universe, were removed from existence entirely. Would space as an "invisible grid," still exist?  [[René Descartes]] and [[Leibniz]] believed it would not, arguing that without physical objects, "space" would be meaningless because space is the framework upon which we understand how physical objects are related to each other. [[Isaac Newton|Newton]], on the other hand, argued for an [[Absolute time and space|absolute]] [[container space|"container" space]]. The pendulum swung back to [[relational space]] with [[Einstein]] and [[Ernst Mach]].
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===The structure of space and time===
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Space and time are some of the most basic features of the world. Things have spatiotemporal locations, and spatiotemporal relations to each other. One of the longest-standing metaphysical questions about space and time concerns how to understand the relationship between locations and relations.
  
While the absolute/relative debate, and the realism debate are equally applicable to time and space,  
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A number of philosophers, including the great physicist Isaac [[Newton]], have considered the notion of location to be more fundamental than that of the relations. They saw space, in particular, as a sort of ''substance,'' which is in principle capable of existing on its own. What explains two objects being, say, 20 miles apart on this view is some more basic facts along the lines of:
time presents some special problems of its own. The ''flow'' of time has been denied in ancient times by [[Parmenides]] and more recently by [[J. M. E. McTaggart]] in his paper ''[[The Unreality of Time]]''. 
 
  
The ''direction'' of time, or [[time's arrow]], is also a puzzle, although physics is now driving the debate rather than philosophy. It appears that fundamental laws are time-reversible and the arrow of time must be an "[[emergent]]" phenomenon, perhaps explained by [[thermodynamics]].
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#Object A is at location 0,0,0.
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#Object B is at location 20,0,0.
  
Common-sense tells us that objects ''persist'' across time, that there is some sense in which you are the same person you were yesterday, in which the oak is the same as the acorn, in which you perhaps even can step into the same river twice. Philosophers have developed two rival theories for how this happens, called "[[endurantism]]" and "[[perdurantism]]". Broadly speaking, endurantists hold that a whole object exists at each moment of its history, and the same object exist at each moment.
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The opposing line of thought, advanced by philosophers such as [[Leibniz]], held that relations are more basic than locations. But relations, obviously, only exist insofar as there are objects that are related. This in turn means that objects are more fundamental than their relations, and so more basic than space and time. Talk of particular locations, for someone like Leibniz, is merely a short-hand for describing relations between objects.  
Perdurantists believe that objects 4-dimensional entities made up of a series of [[Temporal Parts]] like the frames of a [[movie]].
 
<!--This isn't exactly metaphsyics and could well be OR
 
  
The so-called [[Big Bang]] theory raises the question, ''did spacetime exist before the singularity?'' It involves the metaphysical problems of [[absolute time and space]] and the creation of [[matter]] [[ex nihilo]]. One of the formulations suggests  the presence  of eternal [[quantum foam]] existing above time and space.<ref name ="ABOVE TIME"> Gabriel Veneziano,''The Myth of the Beginning of Time'', Scientific American, 2004 Vol.5, Issue 1</ref>.From this eternal, primary substance the singularity creating the new Universe could occur randomly.{{fact}}  [[Ervin Laszlo]] mentions the similar notion of so called "quantum vacuum". [[Andrei Linde]] and [[Alan Guth]] argue that the concept of quantum foam/quantum vacuum and the model of cosmological inflation strongly suggest the presence of a [[Multiverse (science)|multiverse]].{{citation needed}}
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One of the key arguments Leibniz gave for his view was the following: Assume that the Newtonian view is correct. In that case, it is possible that every object in the universe be moved two feet to the left, changing absolute location, but with no change of relations. In Leibniz's own case, he appealed to God's rationality at this point, asking what ''reason'' God could have for choosing one location rather than another for the universe, and concluding that the question must have been confused to begin with. More recent philosophers have run the argument without the appeal to God, merely using it to point out the superfluousness of absolute location.
  
[[Lee Smolin]] who developed the theory of [[cosmological natural selection]] suggests that universes ([[fecund universes]]) evolve in favor of the production of [[black holes]].{{citation needed}}  [[Ervin Laszlo]] maintains that "quantum vacuums" are fundamental information - the carrying fields that informs not just the current universe, but all universes past and present, which he names collectively as the "Metaverse".{{citation needed}}  He argues that such an informational field can explain why our universe is so improbably fine-tuned as to form galaxies and conscious lifeforms; and why evolution is an informed, not random, process.{{dubious}}—>
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In response, Newtonians have worried whether it is intelligible to see space (and time, for which exactly similar arguments apply) as being dependent on objects in the way Leibniz's view requires.
  
===Necessity and possibility===
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===[[Determinism]] and [[free will]]===
{{see also|Modal logic|Modal realism}}
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One of the most recurrent philosophical problems comes from the apparent incompatibility of two independently plausible claims:
Metaphysicians investigate questions about the ways the world could have been.  [[David Kellogg Lewis|David Lewis]], in "On the Plurality of Worlds," endorsed a view called Concrete [[Modal realism]], according to which facts about how things could have been are made true by other [[concrete (philosophy)|concrete]] worlds, just like ours, in which things are different.  Other philosophers, such as [[Gottfried Leibniz]], have dealt with the idea of possible worlds as well.  The idea of necessity is that any necessary fact is true across all [[possible world]]s; that is, we could not imagine it to be otherwise.  A possible fact is one that is true in some possible world, even if not in the actual world.  For example, it is possible that cats could have had two tails, or that any particular apple could have not existed.  By contrast, certain propositions seem necessarily true, such as [[analytic proposition]]s, e.g. "All bachelors are unmarried."  The particular example of analytic truth being necessary is not universally held among philosophers.  A less controversial view might be that self-identity is necessary, as it seems fundamentally incoherent to claim that for any '''''x''''', it is not identical to itself; this is known as the ''principle of contradiction''. Aristotle describes the ''principle of contradiction'', "It is impossible that the same quality should both belong and not belong to the same thing . . . This is the most certain of all principles . . . Wherefore they who demonstrate refer to this as an ultimate opinion. For it is by nature the source of all the other axioms."
 
  
===Determinism and Free Will===
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#Everything in the universe is causally determined, and what is causally determined could not have been otherwise.
{{see also|Determinism|Free will}}
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#In acting in the universe, one sometimes could have done otherwise than he actually did.
[[Determinism]] is the [[philosophy|philosophical]] [[proposition]] that every event, including human cognition, decision and action, is [[causality|causally]] determined by an unbroken chain of prior occurrences. It holds that no [[randomness|random]], [[spontaneous]], mysterious, or [[miracle|miraculous]]  events occur. The principal consequence of the deterministic claim is that it poses a challenge to the existence of [[free will]].  
 
  
The problem of [[free will]] is the problem of whether rational agents exercise control over their own actions and decisions. Addressing this problem requires understanding the relation between freedom and causation, and determining whether or not the laws of nature are causally deterministic.
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The first question addressed by philosophers on this point is whether the claims are in fact incompatible.
Some philosophers, called  [[incompatibilism|Incompatibilists]] view determinism and free will as [[mutually exclusive]]. If they believe in determinism, they will therefore believe free will to be an illusion,  a position known as ''Hard Determinism''. Proponents range from [[Baruch Spinoza]] to [[Ted Honderich]].
 
  
Others, labeled [[Compatibilism|Compatibilists]], (or Soft Determinists) believe that the two ideas can be coherently reconciled. Adherents of this view include [[Thomas Hobbes]] and many modern philosophers.
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"Compatibilists" claim that the apparent inconsistency of free will and determinism can be avoided if one properly specifies what each claim means. For instance, a compatibilist might claim that the "could have done otherwise" in (2) isn't about what really could have been otherwise, but perhaps merely what would have been otherwise ''if'' (as was in fact impossible) one had had a different set of desires of beliefs.
  
Incompatibilists who accept [[free will]] but reject determinism are called [[Libertarianism (metaphysics)|Libertarians]] — not to be confused with the political sense. [[Robert Kane]] is one of the few modern defenders of this theory.
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"Incompatibilists" are those who find no compatibilist solution acceptable, insisting that no compatibilist way of understanding the claims actually captures what was originally meant. Given this, incompatibilists think people have a choice between rejecting one claim or the other. "Libertarians" reject (1), insisting that their confidence in the freedom of their wills is sufficient to convince them that the universe cannot be causally determined. "Hard determinists" reject (2), concluding that the freedom of human will is a mere illusion (both [[Spinoza]] and [[Hume]] offer interests diagnoses of tendencies to believe that human wills are free).
  
It is a popular misconception that determinism necessarily entails that humanity or individual humans have no influence on the future and its events (a position known as [[Fatalism]]); However determinists believe that the level to which human beings have influence over their future, is itself dependent on present and past.
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A small number of recent philosophers have thought that developments in modern physics offered some help on this issue, particularly developments that suggest that there is no genuine determinacy. Unfortunately, the lack of determinism in such theories doesn't appear to be in the right "place." For instance, the fact that the location of particles is not determined by antecedent conditions doesn't seem to make room for human wills to be free, for the general laws of psychology still hold well enough.
  
 
==Criticisms of metaphysics==
 
==Criticisms of metaphysics==
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Though some metaphysical projects have no ambitions beyond conceptual analysis, others have, to varying degrees, attempted to make substantive claims about the nature of reality ([[Plato]] again being a prime example). But the very suggestion that philosophers are in a position to discover substantive conclusions about the fundamental aspects of reality has struck many thinkers of an [[empiricism|empiricist]] bent as patently absurd. This most frequently takes form as a challenge to whether such metaphysical claims can be ''justified,'' but an important movement known as logical positivism denied that metaphysics claims could even be ''meaningful.''
  
Though some metaphysical projects have no ambitions beyond conceptual analysis, others have, to varying degrees, attempted to make substantive claims about the nature of reality ([[Plato]] again being a prime example).  But the very suggestion that philosophers are in a position to discover substantive conclusions about the fundamental aspects of reality has struck many thinkers of an [[empiricism|empiricist]] bent as patently absurd.  This most frequently takes form as a challenge to whether such metaphysical claims can be ''justified'', but an important movement known as logical positivism denied that metaphysics claims could even be ''meaningful.''
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===Criticisms about justification===
 
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The line of thought that has lead some philosophers to claim that metaphysical statements cannot be justified runs roughly as follows: (1) Metaphysical statements are about the world, and (2) all that is known about the world is learned through the senses. Yet, as metaphysicians themselves admit, (3) metaphysical claims cannot be justified merely through the senses. Therefore, metaphysical claims cannot be justified. Such a sentiment is especially obvious in some of the writings of the Scottish philosopher [[David Hume]]:
===Criticisms of justification===
 
 
 
The line of thought that has lead some philosophers to claim that metaphysical statements cannot be justified runs roughly as follows: (1) metaphysical statements are about the world, and (2) all we know about the world we learn through our senses. Yet, as metaphysicians themselves admit, (3) metaphysical claims cannot be justified merely on through our senses. Therefore, metaphysical claims cannot be justified. Such a sentiment is especially obvious in some of the writings of the Scottish philosopher [[David Hume]]:
 
 
 
<blockquote>
 
"If we take in our hand any volume; of divinity or school metaphysics, for instance; let us ask, Does it contain any abstract reasoning concerning quantity or number? No. Does it contain any experimental reasoning concerning matter of fact and existence? No. Commit it then to the flames: for it can contain nothing but sophistry and illusion".
 
 
 
- ''An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding''
 
</blockquote>
 
  
The obvious premise for the metaphysician to reject in the above argument is (2), the claim that all we know about the world is based in our senses.  Plato, for instance, held that prior to birth, we encountered more fundamental aspects of reality, and merely need sensory promptings to recall those aspects.  [[Descartes]] held that God had imprinted certain basic ideas in our minds in creating us, and that we could draw substantive conclusions from those ideas.
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<blockquote>If we take in our hand any volume; of divinity or school metaphysics, for instance; let us ask, Does it contain any abstract reasoning concerning quantity or number? No. Does it contain any experimental reasoning concerning matter of fact and existence? No. Commit it then to the flames: for it can contain nothing but sophistry and illusion ''(An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding)''.</blockquote>
  
[[Kant]], while being sympathetic to the basic anti-metaphysical argument, only accepted a qualified form of premise (1), the claim that metaphysical statements are about the world. He held that some metaphysical claims (such as 'every change has a cause') are not about a world that is completely independent of us, but rather about how objects appear to us. Moreover, the way that objects appear to us is partially determined by features of our own minds, and it is by knowing about those features that we can be justified in substantive claims about how objects will appear to us.
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The obvious premise for the metaphysician to reject in the above argument is (2), the claim that all that is known about the world is based in the senses. Plato, for instance, held that prior to birth, one encountered more fundamental aspects of reality, and merely needed sensory promptings to recall those aspects. [[Descartes]] held that God had imprinted certain basic ideas in human minds in creating them, and that we could draw substantive conclusions from those ideas.
  
===Criticisms of meaningfulness===
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[[Kant]], while being sympathetic to the basic anti-metaphysical argument, only accepted a qualified form of premise (1), the claim that metaphysical statements are about the world. He held that some metaphysical claims (such as "every change has a cause") are not about a world that is completely independent of humans, but rather about how objects appear to people. Moreover, the way that objects appear to people is partially determined by features of their own minds, and it is by knowing about those features that people can be justified in substantive claims about how objects will appear.
  
[[Logical positivism]], a movement started in Vienna that held a strong following in Britain, advanced a strong form of 'verificationism,' the view that the only meaningful statements were those that could in principle be verified by some set of observations. The positivists intended to use this view, which has at least some intuitive appeal, to do away with a large portion of religious doctrine and metaphysical disputes.
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===Criticisms about meaningfulness===
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[[Logical positivism]], a movement started in Vienna that held a strong following in Britain, advanced a strong form of "verificationism," the view that the only meaningful statements were those that could, in principle, be verified by some set of observations. The positivists intended to use this view, which has at least some intuitive appeal, to do away with a large portion of religious doctrine and metaphysical disputes.
  
Three important features of most substantive metaphysical statements, such as 'every event has a cause', are their ''universality'', ''necessity'' and ''non-analyticity''. In other words, they say that, with respect to entire group of things (e.g. events), that each member of that group ''cannot exist'' without having some feature (e.g. 'having a cause'), even though that feature wouldn't be mentioned in a fully adequate definition of the group. The most experiential observations can show us, however, is that some ''particular'' thing ''actually'' has some feature. No set of observations can establish any non-definitional property of everything in a group, so all metaphysical claims would fail the verificationist test.
+
Three important features of most substantive metaphysical statements, such as "every event has a cause," are their ''universality,'' ''necessity,'' and ''non-analyticity''. In other words, they say that, with respect to entire group of things (for example, events), that each member of that group ''cannot exist'' without having some feature (that is, "having a cause"), even though that feature wouldn't be mentioned in a fully adequate definition of the group. The most experiential observations can show people, however, that some ''particular'' thing ''actually'' has some feature. No set of observations can establish any non-definitional property of everything in a group, so all metaphysical claims would fail the verificationist test.
  
While it enjoyed considerable popularity for a time, the positivist project was eventually abandoned, for it became apparent that core statements of scientific theories (e.g. the statement of universal gravitation) share some of the features of metaphysical statements, and so cannot be directly verified by observations. In the wake of positivism, their lessons were taken instead to show that metaphysical statements are not ''meaningless'' statements, but rather that they are generally not ''fallible'', ''testable'' or ''provable'' statements (see [[Karl Popper]]).
+
While it enjoyed considerable popularity for a time, the positivist project was eventually abandoned, for it became apparent that core statements of scientific theories (for example, the statement of universal gravitation) share some of the features of metaphysical statements, and so cannot be directly verified by observations. In the wake of positivism, their lessons were taken instead to show that metaphysical statements are not ''meaningless'' statements, but rather that they are generally not ''fallible,'' ''testable,'' or ''provable'' statements.
  
 
==Major metaphysicians ==
 
==Major metaphysicians ==
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|}
 
|}
  
==Notes==
 
<references/>
 
 
==References==
 
==References==
* [[Panayot Butchvarov|Butchvarov, Panayot]] (1979). ''Being Qua Being: A Theory of Identity, Existence and Predication''. Bloomington and London: Indiana University Press.
+
* Gale, Richard M. 2002. ''The Blackwell Guide to Metaphysics''. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 0631221204
* [[Immanuel Kant|Kant, I]] (1781). ''[[Critique of Pure Reason]]''.
+
* Kim, J. and Ernest Sosa, eds. 1999. ''Metaphysics: An Anthology''. Blackwell Publishers. ISBN 0631202781
* Gale, Richard M. (2002). ''The Blackwell Guide to Metaphysics''. Oxford: Blackwell.
+
* Kim, J. and Ernest Sosa, eds. 1999. ''A Companion to Metaphysics''. Cambridge: Blackwell Reference. ISBN 0631227687
* Lowe, E. J. (2002). ''A Survey of Metaphysics''. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
+
* Loux, M.J. 1998. ''Metaphysics: A Contemporary Introduction''. London: Routledge. ISBN 0203283538
* Loux, M. J. (2006). ''Metaphysics: A Contemporary Introduction'' (3rd ed.). London: Routledge.
+
* Lowe, E.J. 2002. ''A Survey of Metaphysics''. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198752539
*Kim, J. and [[Ernest Sosa]] Ed. (1999). ''Metaphysics: An Anthology''. Blackwell Philosophy Anthologies.
 
*Kim, J. and [[Ernest Sosa]], Ed. (2000). ''A Companion to Metaphysics''. Malden Massachusetts, Blackwell, Publishers.
 
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
* [http://etext.library.adelaide.edu.au/a/a8m/ Aristotle's Metaphysics trans. by W. D. Ross]
+
All links retrieved November 9, 2022.
* [http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?lookup=Aristot.+Met.+980a Aristotle's Metaphysics trans. by Hugh Tredennick (HTML at Perseus)]
+
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/aristotle-metaphysics/ Aristotle's Metaphysics] Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.  
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/aristotle-metaphysics/ Aristotle's Metaphysics at Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy]
+
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/metaphysics/ Metaphysics] Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
*[http://etext.library.adelaide.edu.au/h/h92e/ Hume's Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding: Mirrored at eBooks@Adelaide]
+
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/change/ Change and Inconsistency] Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
* [http://humanum.arts.cuhk.edu.hk/Philosophy/Kant/cpr E-text] (The [[Norman Kemp Smith]] translation of Kant's Critique of Pure Reason)
+
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/properties/ Properties] Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/metaphysics/ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy on metaphysics]
+
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/freewill/ Free Will] Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/change/ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy on change, by Chris Mortensen]
+
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/spacetime-theories/ Absolute and Relational Theories of Space and Motion] Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/properties/ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy on properties, by Chris Swoyer]
 
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/freewill/ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy on
 
free will, by Timothy O'Connor]
 
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/spacetime-theories/ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy on relativism vs. absolutivism about space and time, by Nick Huggett and Carl Hoefer]
 
 
 
  
[[Category:Philosophy]]
+
===General philosophy sources===
[[Category:philosophy and religion]]
+
*[http://plato.stanford.edu/ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy].
 +
*[http://www.iep.utm.edu/ The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy].
 +
*[http://www.bu.edu/wcp/PaidArch.html Paideia Project Online].
 +
*[http://www.gutenberg.org/ Project Gutenberg].
 +
 +
[[category:Philosophy and religion]]
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[[Category:philosophy]]
  
 
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{{credit|109023037}}

Latest revision as of 16:22, 9 November 2022

Plato and Aristotle (right), by Raphael (Stanza della Segnatura, Rome). Aristotle is regarded as the "father" of metaphysics.

Metaphysics (Greek: μετά (meta)="after," φυσικά (phisiká)="those on nature," derived from the arrangement of Aristotle's works) is the branch of philosophy concerned with explaining the nature of the most fundamental aspects of the world. It addresses questions such as: What is the nature of reality? Does the world exist outside the mind? What is the nature of objects, events, places? Is free will possible in a world governed by causal laws?

A central part of metaphysics is ontology, which is the study of being. Ontology is, one might say, an attempt to determine what the most basic building blocks are, out of which the rest of reality is constructed. Philosophers of different times have shown different levels of optimism with respect to how much ontology can accomplish. It appears that Plato, for instance, thought that ontology is capable of showing the existence of entities that are outside of the sensible world, but play some key role in determining the nature of that world. Many philosophers in the twentieth century, however, saw ontology as, at best, an attempt to understand the relations within a certain set of concepts used, such as that of substance, property, and relation.

It is important to distinguish the sense of "metaphysics" employed by philosophers from its recent association with spirituality and world-transcending thought, though the latter does stem from developments in the former. Because metaphysics concerns itself with fundamental questions, nearly every major philosopher has devoted a certain amount of thought to metaphysics. This means, however, that a history of metaphysics would be little less than a history of all of philosophy. This article will, therefore, survey the issues that have most concerned metaphysicians throughout history. A list of historical figures especially worth considering is provided at the end.

Five central questions of metaphysics

Mind and matter

One of the central issues in metaphysics concerns how to understand the relation between minds and the world in which they exist. More specifically: Whether the most basic constituents of mind and the world were one and the same. Democritus and Epicurus, for instance, claimed that the world was fundamentally made up of indivisible particles, but held that the mind was simply a special sort of particle. Descartes held that the material world was composed of material substance, and so fundamentally unlike the intellectual substance that was minds. Spinoza and Leibniz claimed that all of the finite world had both a physical and an intellectual aspect—so that even the most simple physical particle in some sense had a mind. An even more radical position is that of Berkeley, who claimed that the material world is nothing more than ideas.

The root issue is that, in the task of trying to understand what the world is made up of, the metaphysician is faced with the fact that minds and matter appear to have very different natures. One is conscious, the other isn't. One appears to be divisible and complex, whereas the other seems simple. Yet the two also appear to interact, and it is plausible (as Spinoza explicitly states in Book 1 of his Ethics) that only things with something in common can interact. Further, one intuitively believes oneself to possess at least some knowledge about the nature of the world (especially as the result of science), and this seems to require that the divide between mind and world not go too deep.

Objects and their properties

In looking at objects in the world, one often will look for things they "have something in common." For instance, one might say that two apples have the same color, that two people are the same height, or that two books have the same number of chapters. But what is the nature of these entities that are "had in common?" They do not appear to be particular objects—these claims are not like the statement that two people might have a friend in common. The things appear to be "universal," not particular, in that they can be fully present in many things.

There are two related questions one might raise about universals like redness, roundness, etc. The first concerns their ontological status: In what way do these things exist? For instance, would redness still exist even if there weren't any particular objects that were red? After all, people don't think that destroying one red thing has any effect on redness itself, so why would the destruction of all of them do so? But if redness could exist without any particular red objects, then it must in some way be independent of them. This points to the second question: What is the relation between universals and particulars? Are particular objects something more than just a sum of universals, and if so, what? This latter question has a close relation to the issue of change.

The most extended discussions of this problem in ancient philosophy are found in the dialogues of Plato (in particular, the Parmenides). In much of his work, Plato argues that universals are more real than particulars, and as such philosophers who defend the claim that universals have some sort of independent existence are often called "Platonists." The opposing view, called "nominalism," holds that universals exist only in name—in other words, that humans merely have words that are applicable to many objects, but that there is no sense in which the words refer to some entities that are separate from particular objects.

Identity and change

Puzzles associated with change go back at least to Heraclitus' famous claim that "you cannot step into the same river twice." As it is most often interpreted, Heraclitus is making the following point: Given that there is a single river from moment to moment, since there is a change in what is present (for instance, a difference in water levels), it cannot be strictly true that the same river is there. That is, consider the following two claims:

  1. The river has the property of being 4 meters deep on Tuesday
  2. The river has the property of being 3.5 meters deep on Wednesday

But since no river can be both 4 meters deep and 3.5 meters deep, it would seem that the river found on Tuesday cannot be the river found on Wednesday.

One option is to accept the claim that the same river cannot be present at two times if there is any change. Yet this would lead one to claim that very few of the things one thought lasted through time do, since almost everything in the universe undergoes at least some change from moment to moment. Many philosophers have therefore tried to find ways to vindicate talk of persisting objects that don't involve the unacceptable claim that the same object can have incompatible properties.

One option is to deny that it is correct to say that (for instance) the river has both the property of being 4 meters deep and the property of being 3.5 meters deep, since those properties are incompatible. Rather, one might insist, the river has two properties that can be described by the phrases "being 4 meters deep on Tuesday" and "being 3.5 meters deep on Wednesday." The properties described by those phrases are obviously compatible. One might describe this solution as one of time-relativizing the properties themselves.

Another option is to see the object as broken down into "time-slices." The river is then seen as some sort of composite of slices that might be referred to by phrases such as "the river on Tuesday" and "the river on Wednesday." In this view, it's not strictly true that the properties of being being 4 meters deep and of being 3.5 meters deep are ascribed to the same object. Rather, they are ascribed to different objects (the time-slices), which are components of some larger object. This solution can be described as time-relativizing the objects.

A third option is to relativize the relation between the object and the property. In this view, the above statements should be recast as: "The river is—onTuesday—4 meters deep" and "The river is—on Wednesday—3.5 meters deep."

Though these distinctions seem overly subtle, the ramifications of the choice are very significant, for this is a choice about how to understand one of the most fundamental features of the universe: Change.

The structure of space and time

Space and time are some of the most basic features of the world. Things have spatiotemporal locations, and spatiotemporal relations to each other. One of the longest-standing metaphysical questions about space and time concerns how to understand the relationship between locations and relations.

A number of philosophers, including the great physicist Isaac Newton, have considered the notion of location to be more fundamental than that of the relations. They saw space, in particular, as a sort of substance, which is in principle capable of existing on its own. What explains two objects being, say, 20 miles apart on this view is some more basic facts along the lines of:

  1. Object A is at location 0,0,0.
  2. Object B is at location 20,0,0.

The opposing line of thought, advanced by philosophers such as Leibniz, held that relations are more basic than locations. But relations, obviously, only exist insofar as there are objects that are related. This in turn means that objects are more fundamental than their relations, and so more basic than space and time. Talk of particular locations, for someone like Leibniz, is merely a short-hand for describing relations between objects.

One of the key arguments Leibniz gave for his view was the following: Assume that the Newtonian view is correct. In that case, it is possible that every object in the universe be moved two feet to the left, changing absolute location, but with no change of relations. In Leibniz's own case, he appealed to God's rationality at this point, asking what reason God could have for choosing one location rather than another for the universe, and concluding that the question must have been confused to begin with. More recent philosophers have run the argument without the appeal to God, merely using it to point out the superfluousness of absolute location.

In response, Newtonians have worried whether it is intelligible to see space (and time, for which exactly similar arguments apply) as being dependent on objects in the way Leibniz's view requires.

Determinism and free will

One of the most recurrent philosophical problems comes from the apparent incompatibility of two independently plausible claims:

  1. Everything in the universe is causally determined, and what is causally determined could not have been otherwise.
  2. In acting in the universe, one sometimes could have done otherwise than he actually did.

The first question addressed by philosophers on this point is whether the claims are in fact incompatible.

"Compatibilists" claim that the apparent inconsistency of free will and determinism can be avoided if one properly specifies what each claim means. For instance, a compatibilist might claim that the "could have done otherwise" in (2) isn't about what really could have been otherwise, but perhaps merely what would have been otherwise if (as was in fact impossible) one had had a different set of desires of beliefs.

"Incompatibilists" are those who find no compatibilist solution acceptable, insisting that no compatibilist way of understanding the claims actually captures what was originally meant. Given this, incompatibilists think people have a choice between rejecting one claim or the other. "Libertarians" reject (1), insisting that their confidence in the freedom of their wills is sufficient to convince them that the universe cannot be causally determined. "Hard determinists" reject (2), concluding that the freedom of human will is a mere illusion (both Spinoza and Hume offer interests diagnoses of tendencies to believe that human wills are free).

A small number of recent philosophers have thought that developments in modern physics offered some help on this issue, particularly developments that suggest that there is no genuine determinacy. Unfortunately, the lack of determinism in such theories doesn't appear to be in the right "place." For instance, the fact that the location of particles is not determined by antecedent conditions doesn't seem to make room for human wills to be free, for the general laws of psychology still hold well enough.

Criticisms of metaphysics

Though some metaphysical projects have no ambitions beyond conceptual analysis, others have, to varying degrees, attempted to make substantive claims about the nature of reality (Plato again being a prime example). But the very suggestion that philosophers are in a position to discover substantive conclusions about the fundamental aspects of reality has struck many thinkers of an empiricist bent as patently absurd. This most frequently takes form as a challenge to whether such metaphysical claims can be justified, but an important movement known as logical positivism denied that metaphysics claims could even be meaningful.

Criticisms about justification

The line of thought that has lead some philosophers to claim that metaphysical statements cannot be justified runs roughly as follows: (1) Metaphysical statements are about the world, and (2) all that is known about the world is learned through the senses. Yet, as metaphysicians themselves admit, (3) metaphysical claims cannot be justified merely through the senses. Therefore, metaphysical claims cannot be justified. Such a sentiment is especially obvious in some of the writings of the Scottish philosopher David Hume:

If we take in our hand any volume; of divinity or school metaphysics, for instance; let us ask, Does it contain any abstract reasoning concerning quantity or number? No. Does it contain any experimental reasoning concerning matter of fact and existence? No. Commit it then to the flames: for it can contain nothing but sophistry and illusion (An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding).

The obvious premise for the metaphysician to reject in the above argument is (2), the claim that all that is known about the world is based in the senses. Plato, for instance, held that prior to birth, one encountered more fundamental aspects of reality, and merely needed sensory promptings to recall those aspects. Descartes held that God had imprinted certain basic ideas in human minds in creating them, and that we could draw substantive conclusions from those ideas.

Kant, while being sympathetic to the basic anti-metaphysical argument, only accepted a qualified form of premise (1), the claim that metaphysical statements are about the world. He held that some metaphysical claims (such as "every change has a cause") are not about a world that is completely independent of humans, but rather about how objects appear to people. Moreover, the way that objects appear to people is partially determined by features of their own minds, and it is by knowing about those features that people can be justified in substantive claims about how objects will appear.

Criticisms about meaningfulness

Logical positivism, a movement started in Vienna that held a strong following in Britain, advanced a strong form of "verificationism," the view that the only meaningful statements were those that could, in principle, be verified by some set of observations. The positivists intended to use this view, which has at least some intuitive appeal, to do away with a large portion of religious doctrine and metaphysical disputes.

Three important features of most substantive metaphysical statements, such as "every event has a cause," are their universality, necessity, and non-analyticity. In other words, they say that, with respect to entire group of things (for example, events), that each member of that group cannot exist without having some feature (that is, "having a cause"), even though that feature wouldn't be mentioned in a fully adequate definition of the group. The most experiential observations can show people, however, that some particular thing actually has some feature. No set of observations can establish any non-definitional property of everything in a group, so all metaphysical claims would fail the verificationist test.

While it enjoyed considerable popularity for a time, the positivist project was eventually abandoned, for it became apparent that core statements of scientific theories (for example, the statement of universal gravitation) share some of the features of metaphysical statements, and so cannot be directly verified by observations. In the wake of positivism, their lessons were taken instead to show that metaphysical statements are not meaningless statements, but rather that they are generally not fallible, testable, or provable statements.

Major metaphysicians

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Gale, Richard M. 2002. The Blackwell Guide to Metaphysics. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 0631221204
  • Kim, J. and Ernest Sosa, eds. 1999. Metaphysics: An Anthology. Blackwell Publishers. ISBN 0631202781
  • Kim, J. and Ernest Sosa, eds. 1999. A Companion to Metaphysics. Cambridge: Blackwell Reference. ISBN 0631227687
  • Loux, M.J. 1998. Metaphysics: A Contemporary Introduction. London: Routledge. ISBN 0203283538
  • Lowe, E.J. 2002. A Survey of Metaphysics. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198752539

External links

All links retrieved November 9, 2022.

General philosophy sources

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