Epistemic possibility
In philosophy and modal logic, epistemic possibility relates a statement under consideration to the current state of our knowledge about the actual world: a statement is said to be:epistemically possible if it may be true, for all we knowepistemically necessary if it is certain, given what we knowepistemically impossible if it cannot be true, given what we know
Epistemic possibility is often contrasted with subjunctive possibility, and although epistemic and subjunctive possibilities are often expressed using the same modal terms or similar modal terms that are sometimes confused, statements that are qualified in terms of epistemic possibility and statements that are qualified in terms of subjunctive possibility have importantly different meanings.
The contrast is best explained by example. Consider the two statements:
might have been victorious in World War II
The parallel distinction arises between types of conditionals. Consider the difference between the epistemic connection expressed by an indicative conditional and the causal or metaphysical relation expressed by a subjunctive conditional:
- If Lee [Harvey Oswald|Oswald] didn't shoot Kennedy, someone else did
- If Oswald hadn't shot Kennedy, someone else would have
Because of these differences, epistemic possibility bears on the actual world in ways that subjunctive possibility does not. Suppose, for example, that one wants to know whether or not to take an umbrella before going outside. If one is told "It's possible that it is raining outside"—in the sense of epistemic possibility—then that would weigh on whether or not I take the umbrella. But if one is told that "It's possible for it to rain outside"—in the sense of metaphysical possibility''—then one is no better off for this bit of modal enlightenment.