QUINE’S MONISM AND MODAL ELIMINATIVISM IN THE REALM OF SUPERVENIENCES


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Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.26450/jshsr.1131

Keywords:

Ontology, Mereology, Quine, Mumford

Abstract

This study asserts that W.V.O. Quine’s eliminative philosophical gaze into mereological composition affects inevitably his interpretations of composition theories of ontology. To investigate Quine’s property monism from the account of modal eliminativism, I applied to his solution for the paradoxes of de re modalities’ . Because of its vital role to figure out how dispositions are encountered by Quine, it was significantly noted that the realm of de re modalities doesn’t include contingent and impossible inferences about things. Therefore, for him, all the intrinsic forces and elements of entities such as powers and causal or teleological dispositions for ontology demand to be seen neccesarily as bound variables from a monist perspective. Although his denial of analyticity and the elimination of dispositional field of ontology, S. Mumford criticizes the monist perspective of Quine’s paradoxical approach to superveniences. Because superveniences create problems while determining type-type identities from a monist mereological perspective. It is observed that Quine faces with a reduction again in terms of his dispositional monism despite his critiques to repulse vagueness from the ontology in his well-known article Two Dogmas of Empiricism.

Published

2019-03-31

How to Cite

AKALIN, A. (2019). QUINE’S MONISM AND MODAL ELIMINATIVISM IN THE REALM OF SUPERVENIENCES. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL HUMANITIES SCIENCES RESEARCH, 6(34), 795–800. https://doi.org/10.26450/jshsr.1131