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Making New Tools From the Toolbox of Metaphysics

The Nature of Contingency: Quantum Physics as Modal Realism, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020, 240 p, ISBN: 9780198846215

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Abstract

In this review, I specify the metametaphysical background against which Alastair Wilson’s “The Nature of Contingency” (Oxford University Press, 2020) should be properly understood. Metaphysics, as a philosophical discipline, is standing on thin ice. The caricature of the situation is polarized, and is often presented as follows: metaphysics is either entirely extracted from science or it is entirely independent of science. There is a recent trend that focuses on the middle ground between these extremes, searching the philosophical literature for metaphysical theories that can fill the gap, i.e., leaving metaphysics as a free discipline to produce spoils for the eventual needs of philosophers of science. We can appreciate it better with the following distinction between the tasks of ontology and metaphysics, as complementary disciplines. If, on the one hand, we understand ontology as dealing with what exists, we can somehow extract the entities that are existentially postulated by scientific theories. Metaphysics, on the other hand, would be located as an extra layer, in charge of investigating questions about the nature of the entities obtained in this “naturalized ontology”. As a tailor, Wilson adjusts a metaphysical theory in order to perfectly dress the physical and ontological nuances of Everettian quantum mechanics, thus creating a metaphysical theory that gives us intelligibility, with the concept of modality, in two areas: in quantum mechanics, and analytic metaphysics.

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Notes

  1. Equating the EQM with the many-worlds interpretation is by no means consensual (see Barrett 2011; Conroy 2012, 2018), but we will not discuss that here.

  2. To employ the taxonomy offered by Guay and Pradeu (2020).

  3. One can understand Everett’s ‘branching’ process employing an ontology of minds—hence the “many-minds interpretation of quantum mechanics” (see Albert and Loewer 1988; Lockwood 1989)—but recall that Wilson equates EQM with the many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics.

  4. See Arroyo and Arenhart (2019) for a case of incompatibility between metaphysical and scientific theories, using collapse-based quantum mechanics and mind-body dualism as an example.

  5. As there are one-world ontologies for the same formalism presented by Everett (see Conroy 2018).

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Acknowledgements

I would like to thank the two anonymous reviewers for the opportunity to improve this text.

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Correspondence to Raoni Wohnrath Arroyo.

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Arroyo, R.W. Making New Tools From the Toolbox of Metaphysics. Erkenn 88, 2251–2257 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10670-021-00444-3

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