什么也解释不了本质

IF 1 2区 哲学 Q3 ETHICS
Taylor-Grey Miller
{"title":"什么也解释不了本质","authors":"Taylor-Grey Miller","doi":"10.1080/0020174x.2023.2269576","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACTI argue that there is significant pressure to adopt a domain-fixing conception of essence if one wants to vindicate the claim that essentialist facts are proper ends of metaphysical explanation. I then argue that the zero-ground account best accommodates a domain-fixing view. I then respond to a number of objections to the zero-ground account and show how they can be met. I conclude that there is good reason to give the zerogrounding view more serious attention than it has received.KEYWORDS: EssencegroundexplanationZero-Groundmodality Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 For discussion of fundamentality see Fine (Citation2001), Schaffer (Citation2010), Bennett (Citation2017) and Sider (Citation2011), among others.2 For discussion of zero-grounding see Fine (Citation2012), Litland (Citation2017), Donaldson (Citation2017), Muñoz (Citation2020), and more recently, Kappes (Citation2020a; Citation2020b; Citation2022). The notion of being generated from nothing may be stronger in the case of grounding than in corresponding case of theorems. Given that validity is monotonic, it follows that a theorem is also derivable from any set of premises. But because ground is not monotonic, it may turn out that a zero-grounded fact is only grounded in the zero-ground.3 I’m not the first to advance the zero-grounding view in relation to the explanatory distinctiveness of the essentialist facts. Miller (Citation2022) and Kappes (Citation2020a) both argue that this view is motivated by taking the essentialist facts to play the role of explanatory links. These sorts of considerations will not play a particularly significant role in the argument of this paper.4 I borrow this term from Raven (Citation2020).5 In particular that it is asymmetric, transitive, irreflexive. We thus obtain a partial ordering over the domain of facts. I note the standard assumptions here to help the reader gain a sense of what grounding is supposed to be, although nothing I say in what follows hangs on these assumptions being wholly vindicated across all instances of grounding. I also take partial ground to be definable in terms of full ground. P is a partial ground for Q just in case P on its own or together with some other facts fully grounds Q. See Fine (Citation2012, 50).6 See e.g., Mason’s (Citation1967) translation of the Leibniz-Arnauld Correspondence p. 13–17 for a rich expression of Leibniz’s view.7 One must, however, be careful here. On this framing, it appears that objects can have essences without existing which engages with some rather delicate issues about being, existence, and quantification, the discussion of which lie beyond the scope of the present paper. In particular, such a conception appears in tension with what Williamson calls the being constraint. Roughly, the being constraint says that having properties requires existence, and it corresponds model-theoretically to the domain constraint; that all predicate extensions be drawn from the domain of that world. See Williamson (Citation2013) § 4.1 for critical discussion.8 This case is borrowed from Kment (Citation2014) §6.2.1.9 It’s worth pausing here to point out that invoking essences in this way looks like it appeals to a principle often referred to in the literature as Essence Grounds Prejacent (EGP) s: □xP ≺ P. This principle looms large in the background of a significant portion or recent work by metaphysicians theorizing in terms of essence and ground. However, it has recently come under more scrutiny. See Kment (Citation2014) and Rosen (Citation2015) for discussion in favor of EGP, and Glazier (Citation2017) as well as Zylstra (Citation2019) for objections. Here no stand is taken on the truth of the generalization expressed by the principle. In so far as essence theorists take essences to be explanatorily distinctive in the way characterized above, they will recognize the truth of a large class of instances of EGP. All we are interested in presently is developing an account of essence that explains how it can play the explanatorily role sketched above as exhibited in the large class such instances.Despite no present stand being taken with respect to the generalization expressed in EGP, it is worth noting that were the generalization to be true, it would be germane to the argument developed over the next few sections. As Kappes (Citation2020a) has pointed out, there is significant pressure in light of EGP to be open to the zero-grounding account. Here is a terse reconstruction of Kappes’s argument. Given that essence iterates, essence facts are explained in further (iterated) essence facts (similar to how EGP would have it). But Kappes argues that it is a mistake to take the explaining essence fact to be a reason why the explained essence fact obtains. Instead, his proposal is that the explaining essence fact is a link of what he calls ‘empty-base explanation’ that generates the explained essence from nothing. This is analogous to the proposal being made in the present paper. Where Kappes takes the explanatory link that generates an essentialist fact from nothing to be a further essentialist fact, the present proposal suggests that the link is an instance of zero-grounding. Kappes (Citation2020a) anticipates this and later argues that if we are unsatisfied with his account of essentialist facts as explanatory links, we might be able to appeal zero-grounding grounding as a way to make sense of the intuition behind explanation by essential status. One way of taking the aim of this paper is to increase our confidence in Kappes (Citation2020a) claim.10 Fine (Citation2005) characterizes unworldliness in contrast to worldliness. For Fine, a truth/fact is worldly just in case it is made true by/grounded in the circumstances of the world. It is unworldly just in case it is true regardless of/is metaphysically independent of the circumstances of the world. This distinction is meant as a modal parallel to the distinction between being true at a time and being true timelessly.11 Raven has recently made it clear that he didn’t intend this to be a conception of essence per se. Rather it was meant to be a certain view as to what the grounds of certain essentialist facts are. It was meant to leave open whether other essentialist facts were not grounded in generative facts. Raven (personal correspondence)12 It is important to note, however, that they may be satisfactory stopping points in a different sense than the one presently being discussed. Glazier, partly out of dissatisfaction with ground-theoretic ways of understanding what it means to be an explanatory end, proposes essentialist explanation as a distinctive kind of explanation. On his view, essentialist facts can be ends of explanation if they admit of no further essentialist explanation. See Glazier (Citation2017). It may very well be the case that the proponent of the generative view can still maintain that essentialist facts are explanatorily distinctive in this special non-ground-theoretic sense. Thanks to an anonymous referee for pressing this point.13 Glazier (Citation2017)’s argument against the fundamentality of essentialist facts takes this line.14 This analogy is due to Fine (Citation2012) and Litland (Citation2017).15 Some have argued that grounding does not entail necessitation. See e.g., Leuenberger (Citation2014) and Skiles (Citation2015). Typical worries stem from trouble in telling a well-motivated story about what grounds certain kinds of universal generalizations. I find these kinds of worries generally unmoving. For a convincing line of reply see DeRosset (Citation2023, ch 8 § 3).16 This is typically cashed out in terms of modal recombination principles. Recombination is supposed to follow from the Humean principle of ‘no necessary connections between wholly distinct entities.’ See e.g., Lewis (Citation1999; Citation2001). There is an interesting question as to how to determine when two entities (in this case, facts) might fail to overlap. Dixon (Citation2016) proposes a characterization of overlap between facts in terms of what he calls groverlapping. If two facts are different, they groverlap just in case (1) either one partly grounds the other or (2) they share a common ground. Fundamental facts certainly won’t groverlap. One might on this basis attempt to directly vindicate a modal recombination principle for the fundamental facts. For discussion of this sort of argument see Wang (Citation2016).17 Here we rely on the grounding machine metaphor to cash out the notion of zero-grounding. Despite the power of the metaphor, it would be nice if something could be said about that of which it is a metaphor. A very attractive picture developed in Litland (Citation2017) ties the mechanisms of the grounding machine to explanatory arguments. In such a setting the notion of zero grounding is much less mysterious. A truth ϕ is zero-grounded if there is an explanatory argument from the empty collection of premises to the conclusion ϕ (Litland Citation2017, 298). We can think of explanatory arguments as composed from basic explanatory inferences; e.g., conjunction-introduction, disjunction introduction, the inference from a is F to a is G – where F is a determinate of the determinable G. (Litland Citation2017, 289).It is natural to see these explanatory inferences as importantly connected to the essences of certain items (e.g., conjunction, disjunction, etc.). Some attention has been focused on developing inference-based accounts of the nature of logical operations. As an illustration, on such a view we may define conjunction as the operation such that one can infer P ⋀ Q from P, Q. (see e.g., Fine 1994 and Correia Citation2012). Call the inference involved in this definition of conjunction an essentialist inference. We can exploit this essentialist inference to determine when certain truths involving ‘⋀’are zero-grounded – in particular, the truth that [P, Q < P ⋀ Q], since we will be able to construct an explanatory argument from the empty set of premises to [P, Q < P ⋀ Q]. See Litland (Citation2017, 302–304).One may attempt to extend this picture more generally and characterize the essences of other items in terms of essentialist inferences. Take our knife K1 composed of handle H1 and blade B1. On such a view, we might consider the following an explanatory argument involving K1: [H1 is joined with B1 .˙. K1 exists]. If this is an explanatory argument, it’s natural to see it as involving an essentialist inference that is related to the essence of K1. We might try to exploit this essentialist inference in a way analogous to the case of conjunction above to show that from no premises we can derive [if H1 is joined with B1 then K1 exists], which on this view would be a zero-grounded truth. Interestingly, this ‘zero-grounded’ truth seems to express exactly what we would want to regard as a constitutively essential truth about K1.This is the barest sketch of one way to cash out the grounding-machine metaphor for zero-grounding and how to assimilate Nothing Explains Essence into that picture. The devil, of course, is always in the details; details which I leave to future work.18 Muñoz (Citation2020) argues that certain facts are zero-grounded but only contingently so (in particular, negative existentials). This however relies on there being good reason to reject necessitation, which I do not think there is. See footnote [26]. For further productive discussion of the differential modal import of being fundamental/ungrounded and being zero-grounded, see De Rizzo (Citation2021).19 For discussion of the Principle of Sufficient Reason generally see Della Rocca (Citation2010) and Amijee (Citation2020).20 Raven (Citation2020) develops such a worry.21 That is, the zero-ground account can resolve the tension without having to motivate some restriction on the ‘all’ as it is featured in the typical expressions of metaphysical rationalism.22 It’s worth mentioning that some have appealed to the role of explanatory arguments in grounding to make sense of how facts like [p ⋀ p] and [p ∨ p] can have the same ground, yet different explanations. See e.g., DeRossett (Citation2013, 22–24). If that is ultimately the correct way of squaring away Dasgupta’s worry, we have reason to be optimistic about the zero-ground account, given the ways in which it seems to be able to accommodate such a role for explanatory arguments. See footnote [31].23 Many thanks to Jon Litland, Louis deRosset, Josh Dever, Rob Koons, Mike Raven, Derek Haderlie, Carlos Romero, as well as two anonymous referees at Inquiry for their constructive interventions in the project and for the ways in which their comments improved the quality of this manuscript.","PeriodicalId":47504,"journal":{"name":"Inquiry-An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-17","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Nothing explains essence\",\"authors\":\"Taylor-Grey Miller\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/0020174x.2023.2269576\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"ABSTRACTI argue that there is significant pressure to adopt a domain-fixing conception of essence if one wants to vindicate the claim that essentialist facts are proper ends of metaphysical explanation. I then argue that the zero-ground account best accommodates a domain-fixing view. I then respond to a number of objections to the zero-ground account and show how they can be met. I conclude that there is good reason to give the zerogrounding view more serious attention than it has received.KEYWORDS: EssencegroundexplanationZero-Groundmodality Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 For discussion of fundamentality see Fine (Citation2001), Schaffer (Citation2010), Bennett (Citation2017) and Sider (Citation2011), among others.2 For discussion of zero-grounding see Fine (Citation2012), Litland (Citation2017), Donaldson (Citation2017), Muñoz (Citation2020), and more recently, Kappes (Citation2020a; Citation2020b; Citation2022). The notion of being generated from nothing may be stronger in the case of grounding than in corresponding case of theorems. Given that validity is monotonic, it follows that a theorem is also derivable from any set of premises. But because ground is not monotonic, it may turn out that a zero-grounded fact is only grounded in the zero-ground.3 I’m not the first to advance the zero-grounding view in relation to the explanatory distinctiveness of the essentialist facts. Miller (Citation2022) and Kappes (Citation2020a) both argue that this view is motivated by taking the essentialist facts to play the role of explanatory links. These sorts of considerations will not play a particularly significant role in the argument of this paper.4 I borrow this term from Raven (Citation2020).5 In particular that it is asymmetric, transitive, irreflexive. We thus obtain a partial ordering over the domain of facts. I note the standard assumptions here to help the reader gain a sense of what grounding is supposed to be, although nothing I say in what follows hangs on these assumptions being wholly vindicated across all instances of grounding. I also take partial ground to be definable in terms of full ground. P is a partial ground for Q just in case P on its own or together with some other facts fully grounds Q. See Fine (Citation2012, 50).6 See e.g., Mason’s (Citation1967) translation of the Leibniz-Arnauld Correspondence p. 13–17 for a rich expression of Leibniz’s view.7 One must, however, be careful here. On this framing, it appears that objects can have essences without existing which engages with some rather delicate issues about being, existence, and quantification, the discussion of which lie beyond the scope of the present paper. In particular, such a conception appears in tension with what Williamson calls the being constraint. Roughly, the being constraint says that having properties requires existence, and it corresponds model-theoretically to the domain constraint; that all predicate extensions be drawn from the domain of that world. See Williamson (Citation2013) § 4.1 for critical discussion.8 This case is borrowed from Kment (Citation2014) §6.2.1.9 It’s worth pausing here to point out that invoking essences in this way looks like it appeals to a principle often referred to in the literature as Essence Grounds Prejacent (EGP) s: □xP ≺ P. This principle looms large in the background of a significant portion or recent work by metaphysicians theorizing in terms of essence and ground. However, it has recently come under more scrutiny. See Kment (Citation2014) and Rosen (Citation2015) for discussion in favor of EGP, and Glazier (Citation2017) as well as Zylstra (Citation2019) for objections. Here no stand is taken on the truth of the generalization expressed by the principle. In so far as essence theorists take essences to be explanatorily distinctive in the way characterized above, they will recognize the truth of a large class of instances of EGP. All we are interested in presently is developing an account of essence that explains how it can play the explanatorily role sketched above as exhibited in the large class such instances.Despite no present stand being taken with respect to the generalization expressed in EGP, it is worth noting that were the generalization to be true, it would be germane to the argument developed over the next few sections. As Kappes (Citation2020a) has pointed out, there is significant pressure in light of EGP to be open to the zero-grounding account. Here is a terse reconstruction of Kappes’s argument. Given that essence iterates, essence facts are explained in further (iterated) essence facts (similar to how EGP would have it). But Kappes argues that it is a mistake to take the explaining essence fact to be a reason why the explained essence fact obtains. Instead, his proposal is that the explaining essence fact is a link of what he calls ‘empty-base explanation’ that generates the explained essence from nothing. This is analogous to the proposal being made in the present paper. Where Kappes takes the explanatory link that generates an essentialist fact from nothing to be a further essentialist fact, the present proposal suggests that the link is an instance of zero-grounding. Kappes (Citation2020a) anticipates this and later argues that if we are unsatisfied with his account of essentialist facts as explanatory links, we might be able to appeal zero-grounding grounding as a way to make sense of the intuition behind explanation by essential status. One way of taking the aim of this paper is to increase our confidence in Kappes (Citation2020a) claim.10 Fine (Citation2005) characterizes unworldliness in contrast to worldliness. For Fine, a truth/fact is worldly just in case it is made true by/grounded in the circumstances of the world. It is unworldly just in case it is true regardless of/is metaphysically independent of the circumstances of the world. This distinction is meant as a modal parallel to the distinction between being true at a time and being true timelessly.11 Raven has recently made it clear that he didn’t intend this to be a conception of essence per se. Rather it was meant to be a certain view as to what the grounds of certain essentialist facts are. It was meant to leave open whether other essentialist facts were not grounded in generative facts. Raven (personal correspondence)12 It is important to note, however, that they may be satisfactory stopping points in a different sense than the one presently being discussed. Glazier, partly out of dissatisfaction with ground-theoretic ways of understanding what it means to be an explanatory end, proposes essentialist explanation as a distinctive kind of explanation. On his view, essentialist facts can be ends of explanation if they admit of no further essentialist explanation. See Glazier (Citation2017). It may very well be the case that the proponent of the generative view can still maintain that essentialist facts are explanatorily distinctive in this special non-ground-theoretic sense. Thanks to an anonymous referee for pressing this point.13 Glazier (Citation2017)’s argument against the fundamentality of essentialist facts takes this line.14 This analogy is due to Fine (Citation2012) and Litland (Citation2017).15 Some have argued that grounding does not entail necessitation. See e.g., Leuenberger (Citation2014) and Skiles (Citation2015). Typical worries stem from trouble in telling a well-motivated story about what grounds certain kinds of universal generalizations. I find these kinds of worries generally unmoving. For a convincing line of reply see DeRosset (Citation2023, ch 8 § 3).16 This is typically cashed out in terms of modal recombination principles. Recombination is supposed to follow from the Humean principle of ‘no necessary connections between wholly distinct entities.’ See e.g., Lewis (Citation1999; Citation2001). There is an interesting question as to how to determine when two entities (in this case, facts) might fail to overlap. Dixon (Citation2016) proposes a characterization of overlap between facts in terms of what he calls groverlapping. If two facts are different, they groverlap just in case (1) either one partly grounds the other or (2) they share a common ground. Fundamental facts certainly won’t groverlap. One might on this basis attempt to directly vindicate a modal recombination principle for the fundamental facts. For discussion of this sort of argument see Wang (Citation2016).17 Here we rely on the grounding machine metaphor to cash out the notion of zero-grounding. Despite the power of the metaphor, it would be nice if something could be said about that of which it is a metaphor. A very attractive picture developed in Litland (Citation2017) ties the mechanisms of the grounding machine to explanatory arguments. In such a setting the notion of zero grounding is much less mysterious. A truth ϕ is zero-grounded if there is an explanatory argument from the empty collection of premises to the conclusion ϕ (Litland Citation2017, 298). We can think of explanatory arguments as composed from basic explanatory inferences; e.g., conjunction-introduction, disjunction introduction, the inference from a is F to a is G – where F is a determinate of the determinable G. (Litland Citation2017, 289).It is natural to see these explanatory inferences as importantly connected to the essences of certain items (e.g., conjunction, disjunction, etc.). Some attention has been focused on developing inference-based accounts of the nature of logical operations. As an illustration, on such a view we may define conjunction as the operation such that one can infer P ⋀ Q from P, Q. (see e.g., Fine 1994 and Correia Citation2012). Call the inference involved in this definition of conjunction an essentialist inference. We can exploit this essentialist inference to determine when certain truths involving ‘⋀’are zero-grounded – in particular, the truth that [P, Q < P ⋀ Q], since we will be able to construct an explanatory argument from the empty set of premises to [P, Q < P ⋀ Q]. See Litland (Citation2017, 302–304).One may attempt to extend this picture more generally and characterize the essences of other items in terms of essentialist inferences. Take our knife K1 composed of handle H1 and blade B1. On such a view, we might consider the following an explanatory argument involving K1: [H1 is joined with B1 .˙. K1 exists]. If this is an explanatory argument, it’s natural to see it as involving an essentialist inference that is related to the essence of K1. We might try to exploit this essentialist inference in a way analogous to the case of conjunction above to show that from no premises we can derive [if H1 is joined with B1 then K1 exists], which on this view would be a zero-grounded truth. Interestingly, this ‘zero-grounded’ truth seems to express exactly what we would want to regard as a constitutively essential truth about K1.This is the barest sketch of one way to cash out the grounding-machine metaphor for zero-grounding and how to assimilate Nothing Explains Essence into that picture. The devil, of course, is always in the details; details which I leave to future work.18 Muñoz (Citation2020) argues that certain facts are zero-grounded but only contingently so (in particular, negative existentials). This however relies on there being good reason to reject necessitation, which I do not think there is. See footnote [26]. For further productive discussion of the differential modal import of being fundamental/ungrounded and being zero-grounded, see De Rizzo (Citation2021).19 For discussion of the Principle of Sufficient Reason generally see Della Rocca (Citation2010) and Amijee (Citation2020).20 Raven (Citation2020) develops such a worry.21 That is, the zero-ground account can resolve the tension without having to motivate some restriction on the ‘all’ as it is featured in the typical expressions of metaphysical rationalism.22 It’s worth mentioning that some have appealed to the role of explanatory arguments in grounding to make sense of how facts like [p ⋀ p] and [p ∨ p] can have the same ground, yet different explanations. See e.g., DeRossett (Citation2013, 22–24). If that is ultimately the correct way of squaring away Dasgupta’s worry, we have reason to be optimistic about the zero-ground account, given the ways in which it seems to be able to accommodate such a role for explanatory arguments. See footnote [31].23 Many thanks to Jon Litland, Louis deRosset, Josh Dever, Rob Koons, Mike Raven, Derek Haderlie, Carlos Romero, as well as two anonymous referees at Inquiry for their constructive interventions in the project and for the ways in which their comments improved the quality of this manuscript.\",\"PeriodicalId\":47504,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Inquiry-An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy\",\"volume\":null,\"pages\":null},\"PeriodicalIF\":1.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-10-17\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Inquiry-An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1080/0020174x.2023.2269576\",\"RegionNum\":2,\"RegionCategory\":\"哲学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q3\",\"JCRName\":\"ETHICS\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Inquiry-An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/0020174x.2023.2269576","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"哲学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"ETHICS","Score":null,"Total":0}
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摘要

摘要本文认为,如果要证明“本质主义事实是形而上学解释的正当目的”这一主张是正确的,那么就有很大的压力采用一种固定领域的本质概念。然后,我认为零基础账户最适合领域固定观点。然后,我回应了一些对零基础账户的反对意见,并展示了如何满足这些反对意见。我的结论是,有充分的理由给予零基础观点比它所受到的更认真的关注。关键词:本质基础解释零基础披露声明作者未报告潜在利益冲突。注1关于基本面的讨论见Fine (Citation2001)、Schaffer (Citation2010)、Bennett (Citation2017)和Sider (Citation2011)等有关零接地的讨论,请参见Fine (Citation2012), Litland (Citation2017), Donaldson (Citation2017), Muñoz (Citation2020),以及最近的Kappes (Citation2020a;Citation2020b;Citation2022)。从无到有的概念在根据的情况下可能比在相应的定理的情况下更有力。假设有效性是单调的,那么定理也可以从任何前提集推导出来。但是因为根据不是单调的,所以一个零根据的事实可能只在零根据中成立我并不是第一个提出零基础观点的人关于本质主义事实的解释性。Miller (Citation2022)和Kappes (Citation2020a)都认为,这种观点的动机是采取本质主义事实来发挥解释环节的作用。这类考虑在本文的论证中不会起特别重要的作用我从Raven (Citation2020)那里借用了这个术语特别是它是不对称的,传递的,非自反的。这样我们就得到了事实域上的偏序。我注意到这里的标准假设是为了帮助读者了解什么是基础,尽管我在下面所说的一切都不依赖于这些假设在所有基础实例中被完全证明是正确的。我也让部分接地可以用全接地来定义。P是Q的部分根据,只是在P单独或与其他事实一起充分证明Q的情况下。参见Fine (Citation2012, 50)例如,参见梅森(Citation1967)翻译的莱布尼茨-阿诺德通信第13-17页,以获得莱布尼茨观点的丰富表达然而,在这里必须小心。在这个框架下,似乎物体可以有本质而不存在,这涉及到一些关于存在、存在和量化的相当微妙的问题,对这些问题的讨论超出了本文的范围。特别地,这样一个概念出现在Williamson所谓的存在约束的张力中。大致说来,存在约束是指具有属性需要存在,它在模型上与领域约束相对应;所有谓词的扩展都是从那个世界的域中得出的。参见Williamson (Citation2013)§4.1进行批判性讨论这个例子是从Kment (Citation2014)§6.2.1.9借来的,值得在这里停下来指出,以这种方式调用本质看起来像是诉诸于文献中经常提到的“本质基础先验”(EGP) s:□xP p P.这一原则在形而上学家在本质和基础方面理论化的重要部分或最近的工作中显得很重要。然而,它最近受到了更多的审查。参见Kment (Citation2014)和Rosen (Citation2015)对EGP的支持讨论,以及Glazier (Citation2017)和Zylstra (Citation2019)的反对意见。在这里,对于原理所表示的概括的真理性,并没有采取任何立场。只要本质理论家认为本质以上述方式在解释上是独特的,他们就会认识到大量EGP实例的真实性。我们现在感兴趣的是发展一种关于本质的解释,以解释它是如何发挥上述在大量这类例子中所展示的解释作用的。尽管目前没有人对EGP中所表达的概括采取立场,但值得注意的是,如果这种概括是正确的,那么它将与接下来几节中所发展的论点密切相关。正如Kappes (Citation2020a)所指出的那样,根据EGP,对零接地账户开放的压力很大。以下是对卡普斯论点的简要概括。假设本质迭代,本质事实在进一步(迭代)的本质事实中被解释(类似于EGP的方式)。但卡普斯认为,将被解释的本质事实作为被解释的本质事实获得的原因是错误的。相反,他的建议是,解释本质的事实是他所谓的“空基解释”的一个环节,它从无中生有地产生了被解释的本质。 这与本文件中提出的建议类似。卡普斯把从无到有产生本质主义事实的解释性联系作为进一步的本质主义事实,而目前的建议表明,这种联系是零基础的一个实例。卡普斯(Citation2020a)预见到了这一点,他后来辩称,如果我们不满意他把本质主义事实作为解释联系的说法,我们或许可以求助于零基础的基础,以此来理解本质状态解释背后的直觉。理解本文目的的一种方法是增加我们对Kappes (Citation2020a)声明的信心Fine (Citation2005)的特点是超脱世俗,而不是世俗。对于Fine来说,一个真理/事实是世俗的,只要它在世界的环境中被证明是真实的。它是非世俗的,只是以防它是真实的,不管/在形而上学上独立于世界的环境。这一区别是作为一种模态平行于在某一时刻为真和永远为真之间的区别Raven最近明确表示,他并不打算将此作为本质本身的概念。更确切地说,它是关于某些本质主义事实的根据的某种观点。它的目的是开放其他本质主义事实是否不是建立在生成事实的基础上。然而,值得注意的是,它们可能是令人满意的止点,只不过意义不同于目前正在讨论的止点。Glazier部分是出于对作为解释目的的基础理论理解方式的不满,提出了本质主义解释作为一种独特的解释。在他看来,本质主义事实可以作为解释的终点,如果它们不允许进一步的本质主义解释。参见Glazier (Citation2017)。很可能的情况是,生成观点的支持者仍然可以坚持,本质主义事实在这种特殊的非基于理论的意义上具有解释上的独特性。感谢一位匿名的裁判强调了这一点格雷泽(Citation2017)反对本质主义事实的根本性的论点采用了这条路线这个类比是由于Fine (Citation2012)和Litland (Citation2017)一些人认为,禁足并不意味着必要。例如,Leuenberger (Citation2014)和Skiles (Citation2015)。典型的担忧源于难以讲述一个动机良好的故事,即什么是某些普遍概括的基础。我发现这类担忧通常不会让人动容。关于令人信服的回答,见DeRosset (Citation2023,第8章第3节)这通常是根据模态重组原则兑现的。重组应该遵循休谟的原则,即在完全不同的实体之间没有必要的联系。参见Lewis (Citation1999;Citation2001)。有一个有趣的问题是,如何确定两个实体(在本例中是事实)何时可能无法重叠。Dixon (Citation2016)提出了一种关于事实之间重叠的特征,他称之为groverlap。如果两个事实是不同的,它们就会在以下情况下重叠:(1)其中一个部分地为另一个提供依据,或(2)它们有共同的依据。基本事实当然不会消失。在此基础上,人们可以试图直接为基本事实证明模态重组原则是正确的。关于这类论点的讨论见王(Citation2016).17在这里,我们依靠接地机的比喻来兑现零接地的概念。尽管隐喻具有强大的力量,但如果能对作为隐喻的东西说些什么就好了。利特兰(Citation2017)发展了一幅非常吸引人的图片,将接地机器的机制与解释性论点联系起来。在这种情况下,零接地的概念就不那么神秘了。如果有从空前提集合到结论φ的解释性论证,则真理φ是零接地的(Litland citation2017,298)。我们可以认为解释性论证是由基本的解释性推论组成的;例如,连接引入,析取引入,从a is F到a is G的推理-其中F是可确定G的一个行列式(Litland citation2017,289)。我们很自然地看到这些解释性推论与某些项目的本质(例如,连接、分离等)有重要的联系。一些注意力集中在开发逻辑运算本质的基于推理的描述上。作为一个例子,在这种观点上,我们可以将连接定义为这样的操作,即人们可以从P, Q中推断出P * * Q(例如,Fine 1994和Correia Citation2012)。我们可以把这个连接定义中的推论称为本质主义的推论。 我们可以利用这个本质论的推论来确定何时某些涉及到“*”的真理是零基的——特别是,[P, Q < P * Q]的真理,因为我们将能够从[P, Q < P * Q]的空前提集构造一个解释性论证。参见Litland (citation2017,302 - 304)。人们可以尝试更普遍地扩展这一图景,并根据本质主义推论来描述其他事物的本质。以刀柄H1和刀刃B1组成的刀K1为例。基于这样的观点,我们可以考虑以下关于K1的解释性论证:[H1与B1结合。K1)存在。如果这是一个解释性的论证,很自然地,我们会把它看作是一个本质主义的推论,它与K1的本质有关。我们可以尝试以类似于上面的合取的方式来利用这个本质主义推理,以表明从没有前提我们可以推出[如果H1与B1连接,那么K1存在],根据这种观点,这将是一个零根据的真理。有趣的是,这个“零基础”真理似乎恰恰表达了我们想要视为K1的本构本质真理。这是将接地机比喻为零接地的一种方式的最简单的草图,以及如何将“虚无解释本质”融入到这幅画中。当然,细节往往决定成败;这些细节我留待以后的工作Muñoz (Citation2020)认为某些事实是零基础的,但只是偶然的(特别是消极的存在)。然而,这依赖于有充分的理由拒绝必要性,我认为没有。见脚注[26]。关于基本/不接地和零接地的不同模态的进一步富有成效的讨论,见De Rizzo (Citation2021).19关于充分理由原则的讨论,一般参见Della Rocca (Citation2010)和Amijee (Citation2020)Raven(引文2020)产生了这样的担忧也就是说,零基础解释可以解决这种紧张关系,而不必激发对“一切”的某种限制,因为它在形而上学理性主义的典型表达中具有特色值得一提的是,有些人利用解释性论证在基础中的作用,来解释像[p * p]和[p∨p]这样的事实是如何有相同的基础,但是有不同的解释的。参见DeRossett (Citation2013, 22-24)。如果这是消除达斯古普塔担忧的最终正确方法,我们就有理由对零地说持乐观态度,因为它似乎能够为解释性论点提供这样一个角色。见脚注bb0.23非常感谢Jon Litland, Louis deRosset, Josh Dever, Rob Koons, Mike Raven, Derek Haderlie, Carlos Romero,以及Inquiry的两位匿名审稿人,他们在项目中的建设性干预以及他们的评论提高了本文质量的方式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Nothing explains essence
ABSTRACTI argue that there is significant pressure to adopt a domain-fixing conception of essence if one wants to vindicate the claim that essentialist facts are proper ends of metaphysical explanation. I then argue that the zero-ground account best accommodates a domain-fixing view. I then respond to a number of objections to the zero-ground account and show how they can be met. I conclude that there is good reason to give the zerogrounding view more serious attention than it has received.KEYWORDS: EssencegroundexplanationZero-Groundmodality Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 For discussion of fundamentality see Fine (Citation2001), Schaffer (Citation2010), Bennett (Citation2017) and Sider (Citation2011), among others.2 For discussion of zero-grounding see Fine (Citation2012), Litland (Citation2017), Donaldson (Citation2017), Muñoz (Citation2020), and more recently, Kappes (Citation2020a; Citation2020b; Citation2022). The notion of being generated from nothing may be stronger in the case of grounding than in corresponding case of theorems. Given that validity is monotonic, it follows that a theorem is also derivable from any set of premises. But because ground is not monotonic, it may turn out that a zero-grounded fact is only grounded in the zero-ground.3 I’m not the first to advance the zero-grounding view in relation to the explanatory distinctiveness of the essentialist facts. Miller (Citation2022) and Kappes (Citation2020a) both argue that this view is motivated by taking the essentialist facts to play the role of explanatory links. These sorts of considerations will not play a particularly significant role in the argument of this paper.4 I borrow this term from Raven (Citation2020).5 In particular that it is asymmetric, transitive, irreflexive. We thus obtain a partial ordering over the domain of facts. I note the standard assumptions here to help the reader gain a sense of what grounding is supposed to be, although nothing I say in what follows hangs on these assumptions being wholly vindicated across all instances of grounding. I also take partial ground to be definable in terms of full ground. P is a partial ground for Q just in case P on its own or together with some other facts fully grounds Q. See Fine (Citation2012, 50).6 See e.g., Mason’s (Citation1967) translation of the Leibniz-Arnauld Correspondence p. 13–17 for a rich expression of Leibniz’s view.7 One must, however, be careful here. On this framing, it appears that objects can have essences without existing which engages with some rather delicate issues about being, existence, and quantification, the discussion of which lie beyond the scope of the present paper. In particular, such a conception appears in tension with what Williamson calls the being constraint. Roughly, the being constraint says that having properties requires existence, and it corresponds model-theoretically to the domain constraint; that all predicate extensions be drawn from the domain of that world. See Williamson (Citation2013) § 4.1 for critical discussion.8 This case is borrowed from Kment (Citation2014) §6.2.1.9 It’s worth pausing here to point out that invoking essences in this way looks like it appeals to a principle often referred to in the literature as Essence Grounds Prejacent (EGP) s: □xP ≺ P. This principle looms large in the background of a significant portion or recent work by metaphysicians theorizing in terms of essence and ground. However, it has recently come under more scrutiny. See Kment (Citation2014) and Rosen (Citation2015) for discussion in favor of EGP, and Glazier (Citation2017) as well as Zylstra (Citation2019) for objections. Here no stand is taken on the truth of the generalization expressed by the principle. In so far as essence theorists take essences to be explanatorily distinctive in the way characterized above, they will recognize the truth of a large class of instances of EGP. All we are interested in presently is developing an account of essence that explains how it can play the explanatorily role sketched above as exhibited in the large class such instances.Despite no present stand being taken with respect to the generalization expressed in EGP, it is worth noting that were the generalization to be true, it would be germane to the argument developed over the next few sections. As Kappes (Citation2020a) has pointed out, there is significant pressure in light of EGP to be open to the zero-grounding account. Here is a terse reconstruction of Kappes’s argument. Given that essence iterates, essence facts are explained in further (iterated) essence facts (similar to how EGP would have it). But Kappes argues that it is a mistake to take the explaining essence fact to be a reason why the explained essence fact obtains. Instead, his proposal is that the explaining essence fact is a link of what he calls ‘empty-base explanation’ that generates the explained essence from nothing. This is analogous to the proposal being made in the present paper. Where Kappes takes the explanatory link that generates an essentialist fact from nothing to be a further essentialist fact, the present proposal suggests that the link is an instance of zero-grounding. Kappes (Citation2020a) anticipates this and later argues that if we are unsatisfied with his account of essentialist facts as explanatory links, we might be able to appeal zero-grounding grounding as a way to make sense of the intuition behind explanation by essential status. One way of taking the aim of this paper is to increase our confidence in Kappes (Citation2020a) claim.10 Fine (Citation2005) characterizes unworldliness in contrast to worldliness. For Fine, a truth/fact is worldly just in case it is made true by/grounded in the circumstances of the world. It is unworldly just in case it is true regardless of/is metaphysically independent of the circumstances of the world. This distinction is meant as a modal parallel to the distinction between being true at a time and being true timelessly.11 Raven has recently made it clear that he didn’t intend this to be a conception of essence per se. Rather it was meant to be a certain view as to what the grounds of certain essentialist facts are. It was meant to leave open whether other essentialist facts were not grounded in generative facts. Raven (personal correspondence)12 It is important to note, however, that they may be satisfactory stopping points in a different sense than the one presently being discussed. Glazier, partly out of dissatisfaction with ground-theoretic ways of understanding what it means to be an explanatory end, proposes essentialist explanation as a distinctive kind of explanation. On his view, essentialist facts can be ends of explanation if they admit of no further essentialist explanation. See Glazier (Citation2017). It may very well be the case that the proponent of the generative view can still maintain that essentialist facts are explanatorily distinctive in this special non-ground-theoretic sense. Thanks to an anonymous referee for pressing this point.13 Glazier (Citation2017)’s argument against the fundamentality of essentialist facts takes this line.14 This analogy is due to Fine (Citation2012) and Litland (Citation2017).15 Some have argued that grounding does not entail necessitation. See e.g., Leuenberger (Citation2014) and Skiles (Citation2015). Typical worries stem from trouble in telling a well-motivated story about what grounds certain kinds of universal generalizations. I find these kinds of worries generally unmoving. For a convincing line of reply see DeRosset (Citation2023, ch 8 § 3).16 This is typically cashed out in terms of modal recombination principles. Recombination is supposed to follow from the Humean principle of ‘no necessary connections between wholly distinct entities.’ See e.g., Lewis (Citation1999; Citation2001). There is an interesting question as to how to determine when two entities (in this case, facts) might fail to overlap. Dixon (Citation2016) proposes a characterization of overlap between facts in terms of what he calls groverlapping. If two facts are different, they groverlap just in case (1) either one partly grounds the other or (2) they share a common ground. Fundamental facts certainly won’t groverlap. One might on this basis attempt to directly vindicate a modal recombination principle for the fundamental facts. For discussion of this sort of argument see Wang (Citation2016).17 Here we rely on the grounding machine metaphor to cash out the notion of zero-grounding. Despite the power of the metaphor, it would be nice if something could be said about that of which it is a metaphor. A very attractive picture developed in Litland (Citation2017) ties the mechanisms of the grounding machine to explanatory arguments. In such a setting the notion of zero grounding is much less mysterious. A truth ϕ is zero-grounded if there is an explanatory argument from the empty collection of premises to the conclusion ϕ (Litland Citation2017, 298). We can think of explanatory arguments as composed from basic explanatory inferences; e.g., conjunction-introduction, disjunction introduction, the inference from a is F to a is G – where F is a determinate of the determinable G. (Litland Citation2017, 289).It is natural to see these explanatory inferences as importantly connected to the essences of certain items (e.g., conjunction, disjunction, etc.). Some attention has been focused on developing inference-based accounts of the nature of logical operations. As an illustration, on such a view we may define conjunction as the operation such that one can infer P ⋀ Q from P, Q. (see e.g., Fine 1994 and Correia Citation2012). Call the inference involved in this definition of conjunction an essentialist inference. We can exploit this essentialist inference to determine when certain truths involving ‘⋀’are zero-grounded – in particular, the truth that [P, Q < P ⋀ Q], since we will be able to construct an explanatory argument from the empty set of premises to [P, Q < P ⋀ Q]. See Litland (Citation2017, 302–304).One may attempt to extend this picture more generally and characterize the essences of other items in terms of essentialist inferences. Take our knife K1 composed of handle H1 and blade B1. On such a view, we might consider the following an explanatory argument involving K1: [H1 is joined with B1 .˙. K1 exists]. If this is an explanatory argument, it’s natural to see it as involving an essentialist inference that is related to the essence of K1. We might try to exploit this essentialist inference in a way analogous to the case of conjunction above to show that from no premises we can derive [if H1 is joined with B1 then K1 exists], which on this view would be a zero-grounded truth. Interestingly, this ‘zero-grounded’ truth seems to express exactly what we would want to regard as a constitutively essential truth about K1.This is the barest sketch of one way to cash out the grounding-machine metaphor for zero-grounding and how to assimilate Nothing Explains Essence into that picture. The devil, of course, is always in the details; details which I leave to future work.18 Muñoz (Citation2020) argues that certain facts are zero-grounded but only contingently so (in particular, negative existentials). This however relies on there being good reason to reject necessitation, which I do not think there is. See footnote [26]. For further productive discussion of the differential modal import of being fundamental/ungrounded and being zero-grounded, see De Rizzo (Citation2021).19 For discussion of the Principle of Sufficient Reason generally see Della Rocca (Citation2010) and Amijee (Citation2020).20 Raven (Citation2020) develops such a worry.21 That is, the zero-ground account can resolve the tension without having to motivate some restriction on the ‘all’ as it is featured in the typical expressions of metaphysical rationalism.22 It’s worth mentioning that some have appealed to the role of explanatory arguments in grounding to make sense of how facts like [p ⋀ p] and [p ∨ p] can have the same ground, yet different explanations. See e.g., DeRossett (Citation2013, 22–24). If that is ultimately the correct way of squaring away Dasgupta’s worry, we have reason to be optimistic about the zero-ground account, given the ways in which it seems to be able to accommodate such a role for explanatory arguments. See footnote [31].23 Many thanks to Jon Litland, Louis deRosset, Josh Dever, Rob Koons, Mike Raven, Derek Haderlie, Carlos Romero, as well as two anonymous referees at Inquiry for their constructive interventions in the project and for the ways in which their comments improved the quality of this manuscript.
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2.60
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23.10%
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