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    LoyalLoyalJusticeJustice
    Made withinDC&Austin
    When we consider a world in which Bush is nonconcrete, we... — Carmelics
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    Home/Personal Identity
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    Supports→The Linsky-Zalta account can explain the intuition that Bush might not have existed by appealing to concreteness as a contingent property.

    When we consider a world in which Bush is nonconcrete, we are inclined to say he does not exist there.

    Modality & PossibilityPersonal Identity
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    Personal IdentityModality & Possibility

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    Bush might have been nonconcrete in some possible world.Linsky and Zalta claim that being concrete is a contingent property of objects.The Linsky-Zalta account can explain the intuition that Bush might not have exis...This inclination explains why we intuit that Bush might not have existed, withou...

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    Bergoglio is a contingent being, so there are worlds where he does not...84%Bush might have been nonconcrete in some possible world.80%At worlds where Prior does not exist, Prior is not a logician, so ¬Lp ...79%Under Gap, in worlds where Bergoglio does not exist, '¬Hb' (Bergoglio ...77%

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    SEP: propositions-singular
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    Matters are more difficult if one is an actualist, subscribing to the thesis that absolutely everything is actual. Then, if one accepts the existence of singular propositions, one has two options. First, one might deny that propositions like (7) are possibly true, accepting that necessarily everything necessarily exists, as Bernard Linsky and Edward Zalta, in their (1994) and Timothy Williamson, in his (2001), do. This position is only as plausible as the explanation on offer of the intuitive co

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