Future contingents
Future contingents
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/future-contingents/
The New Testament makes loads of statements about the future - death where is thy sting.
But maybe there are huge problems with the truthiness of statements about the future?
The New Testament makes loads of statements about the future - death where is thy sting.
But maybe there are huge problems with the truthiness of statements about the future?
"We cannot slaughter each other out of the human impasse"
Re: Future contingents
Not sure I understand the question.Clive wrote:http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/future-contingents/
The New Testament makes loads of statements about the future - death where is thy sting.
But maybe there are huge problems with the truthiness of statements about the future?
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Re: Future contingents
IIUC the question is whether a statement about the future made now, e.g. it will rain in London on the 3rd of December 2016, can be true or false when made.DCHindley wrote:Not sure I understand the question.Clive wrote:http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/future-contingents/
The New Testament makes loads of statements about the future - death where is thy sting.
But maybe there are huge problems with the truthiness of statements about the future?
If the universe is entirely deterministic then all statements about the future are either necessarily true or impossible.
If, however, the universe is not fully deterministic then it is arguable that statements about non-deterministic future events are neither true nor false when made.
Andrew Criddle
Re: Future contingents
Precisely:-)andrewcriddle wrote:IIUC the question is whether a statement about the future made now, e.g. it will rain in London on the 3rd of December 2016, can be true or false when made.DCHindley wrote:Not sure I understand the question.Clive wrote:http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/future-contingents/
The New Testament makes loads of statements about the future - death where is thy sting.
But maybe there are huge problems with the truthiness of statements about the future?
If the universe is entirely deterministic then all statements about the future are either necessarily true or impossible.
If, however, the universe is not fully deterministic then it is arguable that statements about non-deterministic future events are neither true nor false when made.
Andrew Criddle
So what are we to make of texts like the New Testament that seem to specialise in future contingents?
"We cannot slaughter each other out of the human impasse"
Re: Future contingents
Could you give us one example ?Clive wrote:...
Precisely:-)
So what are we to make of texts like the New Testament that seem to specialise in future contingents?
Re: Future contingents
Is the New Testament a peculiar set of texts that continually play with future contingents and are the authors aware of the issues surrounding these types of statements " today you will be with me in paradise"Already Aristotle (384–322 B.C.E.) was aware of the problem of future contingents. Chapter IX of his work, On Interpretation, is without doubt the philosophical text which has had the greatest impact on the debate about the relations between time, truth, and possibility. The discussion in this text certainly bears witness to the fact that Ancient philosophy was highly conscious of tense-logical problems. Central to the discussion in this famous Aristotelian text is the question of how to interpret the following two statements:
“Tomorrow there will be a sea-battle”
“Tomorrow there will not be a sea-battle”
Aristotle considered questions like: Should we say that one of these statements is true today and the other false? How can we make a clear distinction between what is going to happen tomorrow and what must happen tomorrow? (See On Interpretation, 18 b 23 ff.).
"We cannot slaughter each other out of the human impasse"
Re: Future contingents
My father's mansion
The trump shall sound
There are so many examples it is ridiculous. Is it deliberate?
The trump shall sound
There are so many examples it is ridiculous. Is it deliberate?
"We cannot slaughter each other out of the human impasse"
Re: Future contingents
Ok, the tradition is much older lions laying down with lambs, swords into ploughshares ....
"We cannot slaughter each other out of the human impasse"
Re: Future contingents
If gmark is original, might it have been written as a form of where's wally, : spot the logical,and philosophical issues?
"We cannot slaughter each other out of the human impasse"
Re: Future contingents
It is indeed ridiculous.Clive wrote:My father's mansion
The trump shall sound
There are so many examples it is ridiculous. Is it deliberate?