10 research outputs found

    An Extensional Mereology for Structured Entities

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    In this paper, we present an extensional system of mereology suitable to account for the intuitive distinction between heaplike and non-heaplike entities. Since the need to capture this distinction has been a key motivation for non-extensional mereologies, we first assess the main non-extensional systems advanced in the last years and highlight some mereological and metaphysical difficulties they involve. We then advance a novel program, according to which the distinction between heaplike and non-heaplike entities can be accounted for by bringing together the parthood relation characterized by classical extensional mereology and an Aristotelian extensional notion of potential parthood. Thus, while rejecting the thesis of mereological monism, our proposal is consistent with the thesis of mereological extensionalism. We show that within this framework it is possible to characterize the above-mentioned distinction, to define the relation of material constitution, and to capture three fundamental standpoints in metaphysics

    Choice-Driven Counterfactuals

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    An Extensional Mereology for Structured Entities

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    Voluntary Imagination: A Fine-Grained Analysis

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    We study imagination as reality-oriented mental simulation (ROMS): the activity of simulating nonactual scenarios in one’s mind, to investigate what would happen if they were realized. Three connected questions concerning ROMS are: What is the logic, if there is one, of such an activity? How can we gain new knowledge via it? What is voluntary in it and what is not? We address them by building a list of core features of imagination as ROMS, drawing on research in cognitive psychology and the philosophy of mind. We then provide a logic of imagination as ROMS which models such features, combining techniques from epistemic logic, action logic, and subject matter semantics. Our logic comprises a modal propositional language with non-monotonic imagination operators, a formal semantics, and an axiomatization

    Causal Agency and Responsibility: A Refinement of STIT Logic

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    We propose a refinement of STIT logic to make it suitable to model causal agency and responsibility in basic multi-agent scenarios in which agents can interfere with one another. We do this by supplementing STIT semantics, first, with action types and, second, with a relation of opposing between action types. We exploit these novel elements to represent a test for potential causation, based on an intuitive notion of expected result of an action, and two tests for actual causation from the legal literature, i.e., the but-for and the NESS tests. We then introduce three new STIT operators modeling corresponding notions of causal responsibility, which we call potential, strong, and plain responsibility, and use them to provide a fine-grained analysis of a number of case studies involving both individual agents and groups

    Deontic Logic with Action Types and Tokens

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    A new characterization of the deontic operators of permission and prohibition is introduced based on a distinction between action types and action tokens. The resulting deontic action logic constitutes a hyperintensional system providing resources for a fine-grained study of the basic deontic notions. The logic is proved to be complete with respect to an appropriate semantics, where models include both possible worlds and action tokens, and the philosophical significance of the distinction is demonstrated by showing that a number of puzzles afflicting current accounts of the deontic operators find intuitive solutions in the new framework
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