An Argument for Completely General Facts

In his 1918 logical atomism lectures, Russell argued that there are no molecular facts. But he posed a problem for anyone wanting to avoid molecular facts: we need truth-makers for generalizations of molecular formulas, but such truth-makers seem to be both unavoidable and to have an abominably mol...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Landon D. C. Elkind
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MULPress 2021-08-01
Series:Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy
Online Access:https://jhaponline.org/jhap/article/view/4439
id doaj-2850cf06fc234c07800757ab27dbb126
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2850cf06fc234c07800757ab27dbb1262021-08-26T13:00:03ZengMULPressJournal for the History of Analytical Philosophy2159-03032021-08-0197An Argument for Completely General FactsLandon D. C. Elkind0Western Kentucky University In his 1918 logical atomism lectures, Russell argued that there are no molecular facts. But he posed a problem for anyone wanting to avoid molecular facts: we need truth-makers for generalizations of molecular formulas, but such truth-makers seem to be both unavoidable and to have an abominably molecular character. Call this the problem of generalized molecular formulas. I clarify the problem here by distinguishing two kinds of generalized molecular formula: incompletely generalized molecular formulas and completely generalized molecular formulas. I next argue that, if empty worlds are logically possible, then the model-theoretic and truth-functional considerations that are usually given address the problem posed by the first kind of formula, but not the problem posed by the second kind. I then show that Russell’s commitments in 1918 provide an answer to the problem of completely generalized molecular formulas: some truth-makers will be non-atomic facts that have no constituents. This shows that the neo-logical atomist goal of defending the principle of atomicity—the principle that only atomic facts are truth-makers—is not realizable. https://jhaponline.org/jhap/article/view/4439
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Landon D. C. Elkind
spellingShingle Landon D. C. Elkind
An Argument for Completely General Facts
Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy
author_facet Landon D. C. Elkind
author_sort Landon D. C. Elkind
title An Argument for Completely General Facts
title_short An Argument for Completely General Facts
title_full An Argument for Completely General Facts
title_fullStr An Argument for Completely General Facts
title_full_unstemmed An Argument for Completely General Facts
title_sort argument for completely general facts
publisher MULPress
series Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy
issn 2159-0303
publishDate 2021-08-01
description In his 1918 logical atomism lectures, Russell argued that there are no molecular facts. But he posed a problem for anyone wanting to avoid molecular facts: we need truth-makers for generalizations of molecular formulas, but such truth-makers seem to be both unavoidable and to have an abominably molecular character. Call this the problem of generalized molecular formulas. I clarify the problem here by distinguishing two kinds of generalized molecular formula: incompletely generalized molecular formulas and completely generalized molecular formulas. I next argue that, if empty worlds are logically possible, then the model-theoretic and truth-functional considerations that are usually given address the problem posed by the first kind of formula, but not the problem posed by the second kind. I then show that Russell’s commitments in 1918 provide an answer to the problem of completely generalized molecular formulas: some truth-makers will be non-atomic facts that have no constituents. This shows that the neo-logical atomist goal of defending the principle of atomicity—the principle that only atomic facts are truth-makers—is not realizable.
url https://jhaponline.org/jhap/article/view/4439
work_keys_str_mv AT landondcelkind anargumentforcompletelygeneralfacts
AT landondcelkind argumentforcompletelygeneralfacts
_version_ 1721195559075708928