User:Geofferybard/otherworlds
corner my room? The physicist explains that while this specific arrangement is just as likely as any other, the overwhelming majority of arrangements do not segregate oxygen. 2. Is there at most one empty world?
Most philosophers would grant Peter van Inwagen's premise that there is no more than one empty world. They have been trained to model the empty world on the empty set. Since a set is defined in terms of its members, there can be at most one empty set.
But several commentators on the nature of laws are pluralists about empty worlds (Carroll 1994, 64). They think empty worlds can be sorted in terms of the generalizations that govern them. Newton's first law of motion says an undisturbed object will continue in motion in a straight line. Aristotle's physics suggests that such an object will slow down and tend to travel in a circle. The Aristotelian empty world differs from the Newtonian empty world because different counterfactual statements are true of it.
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[edit]http://www.jstor.org/stable/4107004
why is there anything at all
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[edit]Aristotle introduced the question of the plurality of worlds http://webware.princeton.edu/vanfraas/mss/%27world%27.htm
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[edit][[1]] Is there at most one empty world?