Preface ............................................................. xi
Acknowledgements .................................................... xv
Part I: Introduction ........................................ 1
1 Where possible-world talk is used .............................. 3
(1.1) Modalities ..................................................... 3
(1.2) Intensions ..................................................... 9
(1.3) Relations over intensions ..................................... 10
2 What possible-world talk means ................................ 15
(2.1) Possible-world discourse (PW) ................................. 15
(2.2) Interpretations of PW ......................................... 16
(2.3) Applications of PW ............................................ 18
(2.4) Abstentionism, realism and antirealism ........................ 19
(2.5) Realisms ...................................................... 21
(2.6) Antirealisms .................................................. 22
3 Why possible-world talk is used ............................... 26
(3.1) Conceptual applications of PW ................................. 26
(3.2) Ontological applications of PW ................................ 32
(3.3) Semantic applications of PW ................................... 34
(3.4) A Sketch of a Kripkean PW-semantics for QML ................... 36
(3.5) Other applications of PW ...................................... 39
Part II: Genuine realism .................................. 41
4 Genuine realism: exposition and applications .................. 43
(4.1) Interpretation ................................................ 43
(4.2) Ontology and primitive concepts ............................... 45
(4.3) Conceptual applications ....................................... 47
(4.4) Ontological applications ...................................... 51
(4.5) Semantic applications ......................................... 57
(4.6) Justification ................................................. 57
5 Genuine realism: quantification over non-actuals .............. 59
(5.1) Non-existent entities ......................................... 59
(5.2) Analytic actualism ............................................ 62
(5.3) Genuine worlds are not proper individuals ..................... 65
(5.4) From possibilia to impossibilia ............................... 67
(5.5) The incalculable costs of impossibilia ........................ 76
(5.6) The impossibility of singular reference to non-actual
individuals ........................................................ 77
6 Genuine realism: worlds ....................................... 86
(6.1) Non-individuals ............................................... 87
(6.2) Disconnected times ............................................ 90
(6.3) Temporally disconnected dual existences ....................... 91
(6.4) Island universes .............................................. 93
(6.5) Non-actual spatiotemporal relations ........................... 99
(6.6) Recombination ................................................ 100
(6.7) Unworldly genuine realism .................................... 103
7 Genuine realism: unanalysed modality ......................... 106
(7.1) Accurate analysis ............................................ 106
(7.2) Conceptually modal analysis .................................. 108
(7.3) Doxastically modal analysis .................................. 110
(7.4) Ontologically modal analysis ................................. 112
(7.5) The infinitude of alien properties ........................... 114
(7.6) From infinitude to incompleteness ............................ 117
8 Genuine realism: counterparts ................................ 122
(8.1) Irrelevance .................................................. 124
(8.2) Concern ...................................................... 133
(8.3) Intuitions of truth and validity ............................. 139
(8.4) The consequences of deregulation ............................. 144
9 Genuine realism: epistemology ................................ 149
(9.1) The utilitarian case for GR knowledge ........................ 151
(9.2) Utility as warrant in ontology ............................... 155
(9.3) Obstacles to a prioricity .................................... 158
(9.4) Scepticism about epistemological objections to GR ............ 164
Part III: Actualist realism ............................ 167
10 Actualist realism: exposition ................................ 169
(10.1) Plantingan realism (PR) ..................................... 173
(10.2) Combinatorial realism (CR) .................................. 174
(10.3) Nature realism (NR) ......................................... 177
(10.4) Book realism (BR) ........................................... 178
11 Actualist realism: conceptual applications .................. 181
(11.1) BR and primitive modal concepts ............................. 182
(11.2) CR and primitive modal concepts ............................. 189
(11.3) NR and primitive modal concepts ............................. 191
12 Actualist realism: ontological applications ................. 196
(12.1) Ontological identification .................................. 196
(12.2) Truthmaking ................................................. 201
13 Actualist realism: semantic applications .................... 210
(13.1) The D-problem ............................................... 211
(13.2) D as the actual individuals ................................. 213
(13.3) D as the actual singular terms .............................. 216
(13.4) D as the individual essences ................................ 219
(13.5) The V-problem and its existentialist solution ............... 223
14 Actualist realism: safe and sane ontology? .................. 227
(14.1) The actual world ............................................ 228
(14.2) Abstractness ................................................ 229
(14.3) Unrealized existence ........................................ 231
(14.4) Criteria of identity ........................................ 232
(14.5) Properties .................................................. 237
(14.6) States of affairs ........................................... 239
15 Actualist realism: paradox .................................. 243
(15.1) PW-paradoxes ................................................ 243
(15.2) Kaplan paradoxes ............................................ 245
(15.3) PW-paradox and the species of AR ............................ 246
(15.4) Restriction solutions ....................................... 249
(15.5) Proper class solutions ...................................... 251
(15.6) Non-maximality solutions .................................... 252
16 Actualist realism: transworld identity and transworld
identification .............................................. 257
(16.1) Distinguishing transworld identity theses ................... 258
(16.2) The discernibility argument against transworld identity ..... 261
(16.3) The Adam-Noah example ....................................... 263
(16.4) GR, haecceitism and non-trivial essentialism ................ 265
(16.5) AR, haecceitism and non-trivial essentialism ................ 268
(16.6) The transworld identification problem ....................... 270
(16.7) Semantic stipulation and modal epistemology ................. 272
17 Actualist realism: representation ........................... 275
(17.1) Misrepresentation by linguistic AR .......................... 275
(17.2) Linguistic AR revitalized ................................... 278
(17.3) Misrepresentation by GR ..................................... 284
(17.4) Magical representation by AR ................................ 286
(17.5) Tu quoque ................................................... 289
Part IV: Conclusion ........................................ 293
18 Summary and evaluation ...................................... 295
Notes ....................................................... 298
Extended bibliography ....................................... 361
Index ....................................................... 373
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