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Metaphysical Structure

Wednesday 22 January 2020, 4.00PM to 5:30pm

Speaker(s): Dr Mark Jago , Associate Professor, Faculty of Arts, University of Nottingham

Metaphysical structure is the way things hang together, in and of themselves, and aside from their causes and effects and propensities to behave. Examples include: truth depending on reality, the mind depending on the brain, sets depending on their members, disjunctions depending on their disjuncts, wholes depending on their parts, types being realised by their tokens, determinables being determined by their determinates. These might all be understood as cases of grounding – or rather, they might if we understood what grounding is. In this talk, I investigate parallels between metaphysical construction and familiar logical operators. First, there’s a link between composition (of parts into a whole) and conjunction. Second, I argue, there’s a link between some familiar metaphysical relations and disjunction. On the picture that emerges, metaphysical structure may be understood as logical structure, whilst remaining a genuine mind, concept, and language-independent feature of reality.

Details about the talk will follow. For further information about the work and research of Dr Mark Jago please visit this link

Location: University of York, Department of Philosophy, Block A, Sally Baldwin Buildings, Seminar room I/A/009

Admission: Colloquium members and postgraduate students