
Dividing Reality
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Content
- Intro
- Contents
- 1. The Division Problem
- 1. Introduction to the Problem
- 2. Classificatory and Individuative Strangeness
- a. Individuative Strangeness and Ontological Commitment
- b. The Believer and the Disbeliever
- c. The Hybrid Meta-Language
- d. Individuative Strangeness without Classificatory Strangeness
- 3. Strange Languages and Strange Thoughts
- a. Strong and Weak Versions of Strangeness
- b. Thinking in a Strange Language
- c. Synonymy and Strangeness
- d. Strange Propositions
- e. Strange Primitives
- 4. Further Examples of Strangeness
- a. Classificatory Examples
- b. Individuative Examples
- 5. The Weight of the Intuitions
- 6. The Distinctness of the Division Problem
- 2. Projectibility and Strange Languages
- 1. Goodman's Problem and the Division Problem
- 2. The Projectibility Principle
- a. Projectible Terms
- b. The Epistemological Claim
- c. The Similarity Principle
- d. Another Argument for the Epistemological Claim
- e. Transcendental Arguments and the Epistemological Claim
- 3. Projectibility and Ostensive Learning
- 4. Projectibility, Similarity, and Individuation
- a. Strange Similarity Classes
- b. Intrinsic Similarity Classes
- c. Similarity and Salience
- d. Predictable Things
- 3. Reality's Joints I: Properties
- 1. Reality's Joints and the Division Problem
- 2. Natural Properties
- 3. The Similarity Analysis
- a. The Problem of Imperfect Community
- b. Dimensions of Comparison
- c. The Property P*
- d. Other Consequences of (N)
- 4. The Causal Analysis
- a. The Standard Causal Analysis
- b. A Modified Causal Analysis
- c. Metaphysical versus Nomic Naturalness
- 5. Against Egalitarianism
- a. The Counterintuitiveness of Egalitarianism
- b. The Empirical Argument
- c. The A Priori Argument
- 6. Degrees of Naturalness
- a. Degrees of Metaphysical Naturalness
- b. Degrees of Nomic Naturalness
- c. The Overall Scale
- 7. Explanation and Classification
- a. The Explanation Claim
- b. Putnam's Constraint
- c. Strict Correctness and Pragmatic Adequacy
- d. Explanatory Equivalence and the Strange Languages
- 4. Reality's Joints II: Things
- 1. Natural Things
- a. Egalitarian and Inegalitarian Views
- b. Analyses of Thing-Naturalness
- c. Four Problems for (P)
- d. How Deep Is Thing-Naturalness?
- 2. The Semantic Argument
- a. Objections to the Argument
- b. Objections to the Revised Argument
- c. Normative and Modal Arguments
- 3. Inscrutability
- a. Pseudo-Languages
- b. Truth-Conditional and Inscrutability Theses
- c. Constraints on Reference Schemes
- d. Interpretive Charity
- 5. The Pragmatic Response
- 1. Extreme Relativism versus Pragmatism
- 2. Salience
- a. Salience and Ostensive Learning
- b. Salience and Perceptual Speed
- c. The Salience Principle
- 3. Important Properties and Things
- a. Importance and Salience
- b. Which Properties Are Important?
- c. The Attention Claim
- d. Attention and Projectibility
- e. Important Things
- f. Summary of the Argument Thus Far
- 4. Economy
- a. The Economy Principle
- b. Economy and Incompatibility Languages
- c. Scopes of Attention
- d. How Fundamental Is Economy?
- e. Stylistic Economy versus Inductive Simplicity
- f. Heuristic Devices
- 5. The Pure Pragmatic Position
- 6. The Order of Understanding
- 1. The Impossibility Claim
- 2. Concept-Dependence Claims
- a. The Interpretation of the Claims
- b. "Having a Concept
- c. Analysis and Concept-Dependence Claims
- d. The Intuitiveness of the Claims
- 3. Fine-Grained Propositions and Concept-Dependence
- a. The Fine-Grained Doctrine
- b. Natural Constituents
- c. Derivation of Concept-Dependence Claims
- d. Asymmetric Concept-Dependence
- e. Further Applications
- 4. Derivation of the Impossibility Claim
- a. Strange Propositions
- b. The Derivation of IC
- c. The Thesis of the Necessity of Language
- 5. A "Solution" to the Division Problem
- a. The Fundamental Case
- b. Secondary Strange Languages
- c. Weak Strange Languages
- d. The Lexicon of a Natural Language
- e. The Altered Perspective
- 7. Ontology and the Division Problem
- 1. Ontology and the Order of Understanding
- a. Propositions as Individuals
- b. The Relevance of Ontological Inegalitarianism
- c. The Bare Argument
- 2. Soft and Hard Ontology
- a. Soft Questions and Verbal Questions
- b. Hard Ontology
- c. Soft Ontology
- d. Soft Semantic Questions
- e. Implications of Softness
- f. Connections between Hard and Soft
- 3. Prospects for the Impossibility Claim
- a. The Mysterious Attraction
- b. Functionalism and the Mysterious Attraction
- c. Comparing Classification and Individuation
- d. The Difficulty of Degrees
- 4. Concluding Remarks
- Appendix 1. Projectible Terms
- 1. Relative and Absolute Projectibility
- 2. Which Terms Are Projectible?
- 3. Projectible Terms and Hypotheses
- Appendix 2. Similarity and Natural Properties
- 1. Quine's Similarity Condition
- 2. Boundary Requirements
- 3. Imperfect Community Reconsidered
- 4. (N) and Complementary Properties
- 5. The Problem of Conjunctive Entailment
- Appendix 3. The Fine-Grained Doctrine
- 1. Fine-Grained Propositions
- 2. Analysis
- 3. A Kripkean Problem for the Fine-Grained Doctrine
- 4. Fine-Grained Properties
- References
- Index
- A
- B
- C
- D
- E
- F
- G
- H
- I
- J
- K
- L
- M
- N
- O
- P
- Q
- R
- S
- T
- U
- V
- W
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