Acknowledgments |
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xi | |
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1 | (12) |
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1.1 A Synopsis of This Book |
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1 | (6) |
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1.2 The Ways in Which My View Is and Isn't Anti-Metaphysical |
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7 | (2) |
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1.3 What I Say Here Isn't Really True |
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9 | (4) |
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2 Against Trivialism and Mere-Verbalism (and Toward a Better Understanding of the Kind of Non-Factualism Argued for in This Book) |
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13 | (32) |
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13 | (1) |
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2.2 Two (or Three) Kinds of Anti-Metaphysicalism |
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14 | (5) |
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2.3 Non-Mere-Verbalist Non-Factualism |
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19 | (1) |
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2.4 Some General Remarks about Metaphysical Problems |
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20 | (5) |
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2.5 Against Metametaphysical Verbalism |
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25 | (12) |
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2.6 A Recipe for Finding Non-Verbal Debates |
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37 | (2) |
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2.7 Against Actual-Literature Verbalism |
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39 | (2) |
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2.8 Why Trivialism Without Metametaphysical Verbalism Is Metaphysically Uninteresting |
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41 | (2) |
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2.9 Two Kinds of Non-Factualism |
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43 | (2) |
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3 How to Be a Fictionalist about Numbers and Tables and Just about Anything Else |
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45 | (38) |
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45 | (1) |
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3.2 The Mathematics-Based Argument Against Non-Factualism |
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46 | (6) |
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3.3 A Theory of Objective Fictionalistic Mathematical Correctness |
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52 | (11) |
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3.4 FBC-Fictionalism to the Rescue |
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63 | (7) |
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3.5 Do FBC-Fictionalists Unwittingly Commit to Abstract Objects? |
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70 | (1) |
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3.6 Generalizing the Fictionalist Strategy (or Fictionalist Views of Other Kinds of Objects) |
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71 | (7) |
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3.7 The Response to the Objection to Non-Factualism |
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78 | (1) |
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3.8 A Recipe for Responding to Section-2.4-Style Arguments |
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79 | (1) |
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3.9 A Possible Slight Alteration to What I've Said Here |
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79 | (1) |
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3.10 A Worry and a Response |
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80 | (3) |
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4 Non-Factualism about Composite Objects (or Why There's No Fact of the Matter Whether Any Material Objects Exist) |
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83 | (40) |
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83 | (4) |
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4.2 Is the Composition Question Trivial? |
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87 | (3) |
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4.3 Against Necessitarianism |
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90 | (16) |
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4.4 Against Contingentism |
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106 | (9) |
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4.5 The Law of Excluded Middle |
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115 | (1) |
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4.6 From Tables to Composite Objects |
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116 | (1) |
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4.7 Pushing the Argument Further |
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116 | (3) |
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4.8 Un-weird-ing the View (at Least a Litde) |
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119 | (4) |
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5 Non-Factualism about Abstract Objects |
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123 | (38) |
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123 | (1) |
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5.2 The Argument for Non-Factualism: Part 1 |
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124 | (10) |
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5.3 The Argument for Non-Factualism: Part 2 |
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134 | (3) |
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5.4 Against Necessitarian Platonism and Anti-Platonism |
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137 | (14) |
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5.5 Objections and Responses |
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151 | (10) |
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161 | (40) |
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161 | (3) |
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6.2 Modal Primitivism, Analyticity, and the Lingering Truthmaking Question |
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164 | (4) |
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6.3 What Is Modal Nothingism? |
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168 | (12) |
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6.4 How Modal Nothingism Could Be True (and How TMW Could Be False) |
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180 | (1) |
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6.5 The Literali's Argument for <Modal Nothingism> |
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181 | (6) |
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6.6 The Argument for Modal Nothingism |
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187 | (1) |
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6.7 The Possible-Worlds Analysis and Modal Error Theory |
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188 | (6) |
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6.8 Modal Literalism and Semantic Neutrality |
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194 | (1) |
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195 | (1) |
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6.10 The Counterfactuals of Chapter 3 Revisited |
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196 | (1) |
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6.11 Metaphysical Possibility and Necessity |
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197 | (4) |
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7 What Is Neo-Positivism and How Could We Argue for It? |
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201 | (17) |
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201 | (1) |
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7.2 What Is Neo-Positivism? |
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201 | (2) |
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7.3 Why Neo-Positivism Isn't Self-Refuting |
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203 | (2) |
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7.4 How to Argue for Neo-Positivism: The General Plan |
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205 | (1) |
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7.5 Step 1 of the Neo-Positivist Argument: How to Decompose a Metaphysical Question |
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205 | (4) |
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7.6 Step 2 of the Neo-Positivist Argument |
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209 | (5) |
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7.7 Appendix on Scientism |
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214 | (4) |
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218 | (30) |
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218 | (2) |
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220 | (1) |
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8.3 Three Metaphilosophical Views |
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221 | (4) |
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8.4 Why the Decompositional View Is False |
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225 | (2) |
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8.5 A Quick Argument for the Relevance of Facts about the Folk |
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227 | (3) |
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8.6 Pruning the List of Fact Types that Hybrid Theorists Might Think Are Relevant |
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230 | (2) |
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8.7 Why the Ordinary-Language View Is Correct |
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232 | (7) |
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8.8 Scientism about Conceptual-Analysis Questions |
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239 | (1) |
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240 | (6) |
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8.10 Why It Wouldn't Undermine Neo-Positivism if the Hybrid View Were Right |
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246 | (1) |
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8.11 If Concepts Were Mental Objects |
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247 | (1) |
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9 Widespread Non-Factualism |
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248 | (23) |
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248 | (1) |
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9.2 Some Examples of Non-Factualism |
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249 | (16) |
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9.3 Some Examples of Scientism |
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265 | (5) |
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9.4 Neo-Positivist Humility |
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270 | (1) |
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271 | (4) |
References |
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275 | (12) |
Index |
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287 | |