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    Any two necessarily equivalent sentences express the same... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→The possible worlds account of propositions individuates propositions too coarsely to be adequate.

    Any two necessarily equivalent sentences express the same proposition on this account.

    Philosophy of Language
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    Any two necessarily equivalent sentences express the same proposition.

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    All true sentences of mathematics express the same proposition on this account.Any two necessarily equivalent sentences express the same proposition.On the possible worlds account, any two metaphysically necessary propositions ar...The conjunction of any sentence S with a necessarily true sentence expresses the...
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    The possible worlds account of propositions individuates propositions too coarse...These results are intuitively unacceptable, since sentences like 'Bachelors are ...

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    Any two necessarily equivalent sentences express the same proposition.98%If two sentences express the same proposition, they must have the same...85%Two sentences with the same content express the same proposition.85%Hyperintensional distinctions between necessarily equivalent propositi...83%

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    The first had to do with the way propositions are individuated on a possible worlds account. The view that propositions are sets of possible worlds does not individuate propositions very finely. For example, consider any pair of sentences that express metaphysically necessary propositions, say ‘Bachelors are unmarried’ and ‘Brothers are male siblings’. Since these propositions are true in all possible worlds, each must be the set of all possible worlds. But there is only one such set. Thus there

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