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    Philo defines necessity as what is true and not capable o... — Carmelics
    Home/Modality & Possibility
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    Supports→Philo's definitions of modality introduce mere conceptual modalities, not temporally indexed ones

    Philo defines necessity as what is true and not capable of being false by its own nature

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    Philo defines possibility as what is capable of being true by the proposition's ...Philo's definitions of modality introduce mere conceptual modalities, not tempor...These definitions rely on intrinsic nature rather than temporal facts about what...

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    Diodorus defines necessity as what is true and will not be false98%Metaphysical necessity is a form of necessity grounded in how things c...93%Consequent necessity means necessity that follows from a prior act of ...90%Therefore the correct definition of necessity requires both that φ cou...87%

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    Philo and Diodorus each considered the four modalities possibility, impossibility, necessity and non-necessity. These were conceived of as modal properties or modal values of propositions, not as modal operators. Philo defined them as follows: ‘Possible is that which is capable of being true by the proposition’s own nature … necessary is that which is true, and which, as far as it is in itself, is not capable of being false. Non-necessary is that which as far as it is in itself, is capable of be

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