Information AboutSubjunctive Possibility |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT SUBJUNCTIVE POSSIBILITY | |
| modal logic | |
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SUBJUNCTIVE POSSIBILITY AND OTHER MODALITIES Subjunctive possibility is contrasted with (among other things) Epistemic Possibility (which deals with how the world ''may'' be, ''for all we know'') and Deontic Possibility (which deals with how the world ''ought'' to be). Epistemic possibility The contrast with epistemic possibility is especially important to draw, since in ordinary language the same phrases ("it's possible," "it can't be", "it must be") are often used to express either sort of possibility. But they are not the same. We do not ''know'' whether Goldbach's Conjecture is true or not (no-one has come up with a proof yet); so it is (epistemically) ''possible that'' it is true and it is (epistemically) ''possible that'' it is false. But if it ''is'', in fact, provably true (as it may be, for all we know), then it would have to be (subjunctively) ''necessarily'' true; what being provable ''means'' is that it would not be (logically) ''possible for'' it to be false. Similarly, it might not be at all (epistemically) ''possible that'' it is raining outside—we might ''know'' beyond a shadow of a doubt that it is not—but that would hardly mean that it is (subjunctively) ''impossible for'' it to rain outside. Deontic possibility Although there is some overlap in language between subjunctive possibilities and deontic possibilities (we sometimes use "You can/cannot do that" to express what it is or is not subjunctively possible for you to do, and sometimes use it to express what it would or would not be right for you to do), the two are less likely to be confused in ordinary language than subjunctive and epistemic possibility. There are some important differences in the logic of subjunctive modalities and deontic modalities: in particular, ''subjunctive'' necessity entails truth (if Jones ''logically must'' V, then you can infer that she ''does actually'' V; but in this Vale Of Tears you cannot make the same inference from the fact that Jones ''morally must'' V.) TYPES OF SUBJUNCTIVE POSSIBILITY There are several different types of subjunctive modality, which can be classified as broader or more narrow than one another depending on how restrictive the rules for what counts as "possible" are. Some of the most commonly discussed are:
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