Speaking of Existence: a Previously Unmentioned Meta-Ontological Dispute Between Quinean Ontologists

File(s)
Date
2018-05-01Author
Perkins, Charles Norwood Thorne
Department
Philosophy
Advisor(s)
Joshua Spencer
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Show full item recordAbstract
In hopes of prompting a meta-ontological debate among eliminativist, Quinean ontologists, this paper shows that Trenton Merricks and Peter van Inwagen’s disagreement about the philosophy of language implies a meta-ontological disagreement. I first show that, according to van Inwagen’s philosophy of language, only artificial-language sentences assert positive existence propositions. I then use my analysis of van Inwagen’s philosophy of language to define the concept of apparent ontological commitment that he presents without a definition in his essay “Alston on ontological commitment.” I then present a previously unrecognized meta-ontological disagreement between Merricks and van Inwagen. I conclude with a discussion of the significance of this disagreement: multiple conceptions of being are equally legitimate interpretations of Quine’s meta-ontology, and so there is no settled, single Quinean meta-ontology.
Subject
meta-ontology
ontology
paraphrase
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/91777Type
thesis
