Title
Challenging Lewis's challenge to the best system account of lawhood.
Abstract
David Lewis has formulated a well-known challenge to his Best System account of lawhood: the content of any system whatever can be formulated very simply if one allows for perverse choices of primitive vocabulary. We show that the challenge is not that dangerous, and that to account for it one need not invoke natural properties (Lewis in Aust J Phil 61: 343–377, ) or relativized versions of the Best System account (Cohen and Callender in Phil Stud 145: 1–34, ). This way, we help to move towards an even better Best System account. We discuss extensions of our strategy to the discussions about the indexicality of the notion of laws of nature (Roberts in Phil Sci 66: S502–S511, ), and to another trivialization argument (Unterhuber in Erkenntnis 79: 1833–1847, ).
Year
DOI
Venue
2018
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11229-016-1287-6
Synthese
Keywords
Field
DocType
Laws of nature,Natural kinds,Lewis,Possible worlds,Best system account of lawhood,Indexicality of laws of nature,Mill-Ramsey-Lewis account of lawhood
Indexicality,Natural law,Philosophy,Epistemology,Vocabulary,Possible world
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
195
4
0039-7857
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
0
0.34
0
Authors
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Rafal Urbaniak1135.14
Bert Leuridan231.86