Modality and Essence in Contemporary Metaphysics
Date issued
2024
In
Modality: A Conceptual History (Oxford Philosophical Concept Series)
From page
263
To page
293
Reviewed by peer
true
Subjects
Essence Nature Identity Definition Modality Essentialism Necessity Explanation Non-modal approaches to essence Modal approaches to essence
Abstract
Essentialists hold that at least a certain range of entities can be meaningfully said to have natures, essences, or essential features independently of how these entities are described, conceptualized or otherwise placed with respect to our specifically human interests, purposes or activities. Modalists about essence, on the one hand, take the position that the essential truths are a subset of the necessary truths and the essential properties of entities are included among their necessary properties. Non-modalists about essence, on the other hand, oppose the reduction of essence to modality and hold, rather, that essence is more basic than, and explanatory of, modality. This chapter begins with a brief summary of Kit Fine’s well-known challenges to the modal account of essence and considers a recent attempt by “sparse modalists” like Sam Cowling and Nathan Wildman to respond to Fine’s counterexamples by adding a sparseness constraint to the “bare” modal account of essence. A further question arises, however, as to whether and how Fine’s definitional approach can avoid his own counterexamples against the modal approach to essence. The chapter concludes with some final thoughts concerning the theoretical roles ascribed to essence by modalists and non-modalists.
Publication type
book part
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Name
Kathrin Koslicki, Modality and Essence in Contemporary Metaphysics (published).pdf
Type
Main Article
Size
14.54 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
