CEU Electronic Theses and Dissertations, 2014
Author | Kodaj, Dániel |
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Title | A defense of idealism |
Summary | This dissertation defends idealism. Chapter 1 defines idealism as the thesis that physical objects are ideal, with ideal objects defined as objects the existence of which necessitates the existence of subjects who can observe them. The definition is fine-tuned in various ways, and it is related to recent theories of metaphysical fundamentality. Chapter 2 reconstructs three contemporary arguments for idealism, Howard Robinson’s argument against real matter and John Foster’s arguments against real space. I claim that Robinson’s argument is open to the objection that spacetime is real but Foster effectively challenges that idea. Chapter 3 presents a new argument against the reality of spacetime on the basis of a puzzle about relativity. Chapter 4 examines two metaphysical objections to idealism, the truthmaker objection, which says that the idealist cannot supply truthmakers for physical truths, and the nomic objection, which says that the idealist cannot explain laws. I argue that these objections can be deflected by conjoining idealism with theism. |
Supervisor | Robinson, Howard |
Department | Philosophy PhD |
Full text | https://www.etd.ceu.edu/2014/kodaj_daniel.pdf |
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