Impossible world
In philosophical logic, the concept of an impossible world
is used to model certain
phenomena that cannot be adequately handled using ordinary possible worlds. An
impossible world,, is the same sort of thing as a possible world ,
except that it is in some sense "impossible." Depending on the context, this may mean that some contradictions, statements of the form are true at, or that the normal laws of logic, metaphysics, and mathematics, fail to
hold at, or both. Impossible worlds are controversial objects in philosophy, logic, and semantics. They have been around since the advent of possible world semantics for modal logic, as well as world based semantics for non-classical logics, but have yet to find the ubiquitous acceptance, that their possible counterparts have found in all walks of philosophy.
Argument from ways
Possible worlds
Possible worlds are often regarded with suspicion, which is why their proponents have struggled to find arguments in their favor. An often-cited argument is called the argument from ways. It defines possible worlds as "ways how things could have been" and relies for its premises and inferences on assumptions from natural language, for example:The central step of this argument happens at ' where the plausible ' is interpreted in a way that involves quantification over "ways". Many philosophers, following Willard Van Orman Quine, hold that quantification entails ontological commitments, in this case, a commitment to the existence of possible worlds. Quine himself restricted his method to scientific theories, but others have applied it also to natural language, for example, Amie L. Thomasson in her paper entitled Ontology Made Easy. The strength of the argument from ways depends on these assumptions and may be challenged by casting doubt on the quantifier-method of ontology or on the reliability of natural language as a guide to ontology.
Impossible worlds
A similar argument can be used to justify the thesis that there are impossible worlds, for example:The problem for the defender of possible worlds is that language is ambiguous concerning the meaning of : does it mean that this is a way how things couldn't be or that this is not a way how things could be. It is open to critics of impossible worlds to assert the latter option, which would invalidate the argument.
Applications
Non-normal modal logics
Non-normal worlds were introduced by Saul Kripke in 1965 as a purely technical device toprovide semantics for modal logics weaker than the system K — in particular, modal logics that reject
the rule of necessitation:
Such logics are typically referred to as "non-normal." Under the standard interpretation of modal vocabulary in Kripke semantics, we have if and only if in each model, holds in all worlds. To construct a model in which holds in all worlds but does not, we need either to interpret in a non-standard manner, or we reinterpret the condition for being valid. This latter choice is what Kripke does. We single out a class of worlds as normal, and we take validity to be truth in every normal world in a model. in this way we may construct a model in which is true in every normal world, but in which is not. We need only ensure that this world have an accessible world which is not normal. Here, can fail, and hence, at our original world, fails to be necessary, despite being a truth of the logic.
These non-normal worlds are impossible in the sense that they are not constrained by what is true according to the logic. From the fact that, it does not follow that holds in a non-normal world.
For more discussion of the interpretation of the language of modal logic in models with worlds, see the entries on modal logic and on Kripke semantics.
Avoiding Curry's paradox
is a serious problem for logicians who are interested in developing formal languages that are "semantically closed". The paradox relies on the seemingly obvious principle of contraction:There are ways of using non-normal worlds in a semantical system that invalidate contraction. Moreover, these methods can be given a reasonable philosophical justification by construing non-normal worlds as worlds at which "the laws of logic fail."
Counternecessary statements
A counternecessary statement is a counterfactual conditional whose antecedent is not merely false, but necessarily so.For the sake of argument, assume that either of the following are the case:
Presumably each of these statements is such that if it is true, then it is necessarily true.
Thus one of the following is being assumed:
Now consider the following:
This is intuitively false, as one of the fundamental tenets of intuitionism is precisely that the LEM does not hold. Suppose this statement is cashed out as:
This holds vacuously, given either or.
Now suppose impossible worlds are considered in addition to possible ones. It is
compatible with that there are impossible worlds at which intuitionism is true, and with that there are impossible worlds at which the LEM is false. This yields the interpretation:
This does not seem to be the case, for intuitively there are impossible worlds at which intuitionism is true and the law of excluded middle does not hold.