Abstract

Priority Monism (hereafter, ‘Monism’), as defined by Jonathan Schaffer (Philos Rev 119:131–176, 2010), has a number of components. It is the view that: the cosmos exists; the cosmos is a maximal actual concrete object, of which all actual concrete objects are parts; the cosmos is basic—there is no object upon which the cosmos depends, ontologically; ontological dependence is a primitive and unanalysable relation. In a recent attack, Lowe (Spinoza on monism. Palgave Macmillan, London, pp 92–122, 2012) has offered a series of arguments to show that Monism fails. He offers up four tranches of argument, with different focuses. These focal points are: (1) being a concrete object; (2) aggregation and dependence; (3) analyses of ontological dependence; (4) Schaffer’s no-overlap principle. These are all technical notions, but each figures at the heart of a cluster of arguments that Lowe puts forward. To respond, I work through each tranche of argument in turn. Before that, in the first section, I offer a cursory statement of Monism, as Schaffer presents it in his 2010 paper, Monism: The Priority of the Whole. I then respond to each of Lowe’s criticisms in turn, deploying material from Schaffer’s 2009 paper Spacetime: the One Substance, as well as various pieces of conceptual machinery from Lowe’s own works (The possibility of metaphysics. Clarendon, Oxford, 1998, 2010) to deflect Lowe’s (Spinoza on monism. Palgave Macmillan, London, pp 92–122, 2012) attacks. In the process of defending Monism from Lowe (Spinoza on monism. Palgave Macmillan, London, pp 92–122, 2012), I end up offering some subtle refinements to Schaffer’s (Philos Rev 119:131–176, 2010) view and explain how the resulting ‘hybrid’ view fares in the wider dialectic.

Highlights

  • In a recent attack, Lowe (2012) has offered a series of arguments to show that Monism fails

  • If we are to say that the cosmos is the single concrete object that all other concrete objects are ontologically dependent upon, we had better have some grasp of what is meant by the term ‘ontological dependence’

  • It is true that Socrates is generically existentially dependent upon {Socrates}. This is the wrong result if the notion that we are after an asymmetric account of ontological dependence

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Summary

The Spacetime-cosmos

The view that Schaffer (2009) defends is that spacetime itself is a substance and, relatedly, that this substance is Monistic. When God makes the world, she need only create spacetime. The second thing that we require is a statement of (what Schaffer calls) the identity thesis, which: identifies material objects with spacetime regions. In particular I will be defending the identity view, which is the version of monism that identifies every spacetime region with a material object. On this view there is no distinction between the container and the contained. We have in-hand Schaffer’s account of Monism as the thesis that spacetime is the one substance

Is the cosmos studied?
Is the cosmos an object?
Is the spacetime concrete?
Spacetimes and Dependencies
Dialectical Concerns
Ontological Dependence
Return to the cosmos
Overlap
The first hope: a reply to Paul?
Conclusion
Full Text
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