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    Necessitism in SQML amounts to ruling out the prospect of... — Carmelics
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    Supports→Q is equivalent to SQML when contingent beings are ruled out

    Necessitism in SQML amounts to ruling out the prospect of contingent beings

    Modality & PossibilityTruth & Knowledge
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    Modality & PossibilityTruth & Knowledge

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    Q is SQML minus its necessitismQ is equivalent to SQML when contingent beings are ruled outRestoring the exclusion of contingent beings to Q recovers full SQML

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    Q is equivalent to SQML when contingent beings are ruled out89%Human beings are contingent beings84%A contingent thing is one for which it is possible either to exist or ...82%If a contingent thing exists, its existence is not settled by its own ...82%

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    The unprovability of \(\rS \tau\) in Q and, hence, more generally, Q’s inability to prove the existence of any necessary beings is the key difference between Q and SQML and, more specifically, it is what justifies the inapplicability of the full necessitation principle Nec to formulas containing free terms, since some of those terms might refer to contingent beings. This is, in particular, the key to blocking the controversial theorems of SQML, as their proofs all depend essentially on such an a

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