John Horden and Dan López de Sa
(Social Ontology 2020)
Groups as Pluralities John Horden and Dan Lpez de Sa (Social - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Groups as Pluralities John Horden and Dan Lpez de Sa (Social Ontology 2020) 1. The Plural View of Groups Singularism : each social group is a single thing The plural view of groups: each social group is identical to its members In
John Horden and Dan López de Sa
(Social Ontology 2020)
its members
members
Korman (2015)
defence
the nine justices are identical to
“scissors”
Supremes”, are undisguised plurals
membership over time and between possible worlds
Supreme Court, but she wasn’t always and might never have been a member of it
Ginsburg, and couldn’t have failed to include her
worlds
different times and worlds
TRUE: “The U.S. Chief Justice used to be someone else” FALSE: “John Roberts used to be someone else” TRUE: “The U.S. Chief Justice could have been someone else” FALSE: “John Roberts could have been someone else”
Still, John Roberts = the U.S. Chief Justice
TRUE: “The U.S. Supreme Court used to include different people” FALSE: “John Roberts, Clarence Thomas, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, Samuel Alito, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh used to include different people” TRUE: “The U.S. Supreme Court could have included different people” FALSE: “John Roberts, Clarence Thomas, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, Samuel Alito, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh could have included different people”
Still, John Roberts et al. = the U.S. Supreme Court
“The same group ruled on Dred Scott v. Sandford in 1857 and on Roe v. Wade in 1973, that group being the U.S. Supreme Court”
ambiguous between numerical-identity and type-identity readings
“This is the same fruit as that” (successively pointing at two apples) “The same elected official was impeached by the U.S. House of Representatives in 1998 and 2019, that elected official being the U.S. President” “The same group of people ruled on Dred Scott v. Sandford in 1857 and on Roe v. Wade in 1973, that group of people being the U.S. Supreme Court”
the same members
Committee on Judicial Ethics
duties, performing different actions, and being in session at different times (Uzquiano, 2004)
cases
Special Committee on Judicial Ethics
duties, performing different actions, and chairing sessions at different times (López de Sa, 2007)
groups?
inappropriateness for falsehood and to mistake pragmatic appropriateness for truth
group terms
because he’s the Chief Justice, and not because he’s the Head
true but inappropriate
Head of the Special Committee
metalinguistic negation, as in: “The Head of the Special Committee isn’t chairing the session”
session.” Even if true, this could easily mislead the audience into thinking that the denoted person is chairing the session because he’s the Head of the Special Committee
Supreme Court and the Special Committee, but they’re currently in session because they’re the Supreme Court, and not because they’re the Special Committee
inappropriate
Committee
metalinguistic negation, as in: “The Special Committee isn’t in session”
could easily mislead the audience into thinking that the denoted people are in session because they’re the Special Committee
group terms. E.g. the following argument, suitably understood, may be sound:
anything), as does “the Head of the Special Committee”
whoever was then the President
appointed to that role by whoever was then the President
may be sound:
Constitution
anything), as does “the Special Committee”
Constitution
interpret the Constitution
groups to be mainly concerned with particular groups rather than abstract social roles
celebrate, or rule on legal cases
reductionist views of groups
their members?
but has trouble accounting for how groups are located and have causal powers
located and have causal powers, but cannot offer a straightforward account of group membership
bother, when we can go plural?
References
Black, M., 1971, “The Elusiveness of Sets”, Review of Metaphysics, 24(4): 614-636. Korman, D. Z., 2015, Objects: Nothing Out of the Ordinary, Oxford: Oxford University Press. López de Sa, D., 2007, “The Chief Supreme Court Justice: A Metaphysical Puzzle?”, Crítica, 39(115): 61-68. Uzquiano, G., 2004, “The Supreme Court and the Supreme Court Justices: A Metaphysical Puzzle”, Noûs, 38(1): 135-153.