Parmenides' Modal Fallacy
Author: Lewis, Frank A.1
Source: Phronesis: A Journal for Ancient Philosophy, Volume 54, Number 1, 2009 , pp. 1-8(8)
Publisher: BRILL
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Abstract:
In his great poem, Parmenides uses an argument by elimination to select the correct "way of inquiry" from a pool of two, the ways of is and of is not, joined later by a third, "mixed" way of is and is not. Parmenides' first two ways are soon given modal upgrades - is becomes cannot not be, and is not becomes necessarily is not (B2, 3-6) - and these are no longer contradictories of one another. And is the common view right, that Parmenides rejects the "mixed" way because it is a contradiction? I argue that the modal upgrades are the product of an illicit modal shift. This same shift, built into two Exclusion Arguments, gives Parmenides a novel argument to show that the "mixed" way fails. Given the independent failure of the way of is not, Parmenides' argument by elimination is complete.Keywords: PARMENIDES; MODAL FALLACY; SCOPE; ARGUMENT BY ELIMINATION; CONTRADICTORIES
Document Type: Research article
DOI: 10.1163/156852808X375228
Affiliations: 1: University of Southern California, School of Philosophy, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0451, USA
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