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    Therefore, necessary equivalence is insufficient to guara... — Carmelics
    Home/Philosophy of Language
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    Supports→Explanation is hyperintensional, meaning expressions flanking 'explains' cannot always be substituted with necessary equivalents salva veritate.

    Therefore, necessary equivalence is insufficient to guarantee explanatory substitutability.

    CausationPhilosophy of Language
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    Philosophy of LanguageCausation

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    Every pure mathematical truth is a necessary truth.Explanation is hyperintensional, meaning expressions flanking 'explains' cannot ...Not every mathematical truth explains every other mathematical truth.One pure mathematical truth can explain another mathematical truth.

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    If 'because' were not hyperintensional, logical equivalents would be m...79%The semantic properties of sentences must be explained prior to the se...76%Ignorance of necessary truths or necessary equivalences is correctly u...74%Material equivalence of F and G is a sufficient condition for the iden...74%

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    Explanation is plausibly hyperintensional: “explains” can be flanked by expressions that cannot be substituted with necessary equivalents salva veritate. One pure mathematical truth can explain another, but not every mathematical truth explains every other, even if every pure mathematical truth is a necessary truth (Baron, Colyvan, & Ripley 2020). Schneider (2011) argues that sometimes logical equivalents can explain each other, making a case that “because” is hyperintensional. \({\sim}{\sim

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