Bennett, Jonathan formerly Professor of Philosophy, Syracuse University
Print publication date: 2003 (this edition)
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: November 2003
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-925887-1







doi:10.1093/0199258872.003.0019

Jonathan Bennett
Abstract: Lewis tried to use his analysis of subjunctive conditionals to explain time's arrow: our sense of the fixity of the past and non-fixity of the future. This required him to state his analysis—and thus his conditions for closeness of worlds—without using any temporal-order concepts, only temporal-metric ones. Criticism of his ingenious attempt to do this, especially his thesis about what it takes for there to be a convergence of two previously unalike worlds.

Keywords: conditionals, convergence, fixity, future, Lewis, past, possible worlds, subjunctive conditionals, time, time's arrow,

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