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Tristan Grøtvedt Haze, "Meaning and Metaphysical Necessity" (Routledge, 2022)
Episode 299

Tristan Grøtvedt Haze, "Meaning and Metaphysical Necessity" (Routledge, 2022)

An interview with Tristan Grøtvedt Haze

New Books in Language and Translation · Marshall Poe

November 10, 20221h 7m

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Show Notes

In 1980, the philosopher and logician Saul Kripke published a small but hugely influential book, Naming and Necessity, in which he argued that some claims that we discover empirically to be true are also necessarily true – true not just in our world, but in any possible world in which the objects or kinds referred to by the words in the sentence exist. In Meaning and Metaphysical Necessity (Routledge, 2022), Tristan Grotvedt Haze revisits the concept of the necessary a posteriori. He uses a method of “factorization” to explain the sort of a priori philosophical analysis that can give us insight into modal status, but – in contrast to Kripke – defends a neo-Fregean theory of meaning. Grotvedt Haze, who is a lecturer in philosophy at the University of Melbourne, also considers the nature of metaphysical necessity itself, and ends up being a skeptic about strong metaphysical necessity.

Carrie Figdor is professor of philosophy at the University of Iowa.

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