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David Kellogg Lewis (September 28, 1941 – October 14, 2001) was an American philosopher. Lewis taught briefly at UCLA and then at Princeton University from 1970 until his death. He is closely associated with Australia, whose philosophical community he visited almost annually for more than 30 years.
David Lewis | |
---|---|
![]() Lewis in 1962, while at Swarthmore College | |
Born | David Kellogg Lewis September 28, 1941 Oberlin, Ohio, U.S. |
Died | October 14, 2001 (aged 60) Princeton, New Jersey, U.S. |
Other names | Bruce Le Catt |
Education | Swarthmore College (BA) Oxford University Harvard University (PhD) |
Spouse | Stephanie Lewis (m. 1965–2001) |
Era | 20th-century philosophy |
Region | Western philosophy |
School | Analytic Nominalism Perdurantism |
Institutions | Princeton University |
Doctoral advisor | Willard Van Orman Quine |
Other academic advisors | Donald Cary Williams Iris Murdoch |
Doctoral students | Robert Brandom Peter Railton J. David Velleman |
Main interests | Logic · Language · Metaphysics Epistemology · Ethics |
Notable ideas | Possible worlds · Modal realism · Counterfactuals · Counterpart theory · · · Lewis signaling game · The endurantism–perdurantism distinction Descriptive-causal theory of reference · De se Qualitative vs quantitative parsimony Ramsey–Lewis method Gunk Ontological innocence Centered world |
Lewis made significant contributions in philosophy of mind, philosophy of probability, epistemology, philosophical logic, aesthetics, philosophy of mathematics, philosophy of time and philosophy of science. In most of these fields he is considered among the most important figures of recent decades. Lewis is most famous for his work in metaphysics, philosophy of language and semantics, in which his books On the Plurality of Worlds (1986) and Counterfactuals (1973) are considered classics. His works on the logic and semantics of counterfactual conditionals are broadly used by philosophers and linguists along with a competing account from Robert Stalnaker; together the Stalnaker–Lewis theory of counterfactuals has become perhaps the most pervasive and influential account of its type in the philosophical and linguistic literature. His metaphysics incorporated seminal contributions to quantified modal logic, the development of counterpart theory, counterfactual causation, and the position called "Humean supervenience". Most comprehensively in On the Plurality of Worlds, Lewis defended modal realism: the view that possible worlds exist as concrete entities in logical space, and that our world is one among many equally real possible ones.
Early life and education
Lewis was born in Oberlin, Ohio, to John D. Lewis, a professor of government at Oberlin College, and Ruth Ewart Kellogg Lewis, a medieval historian. He was the grandson of the Presbyterian minister Edwin Henry Kellogg and the great-grandson of the Presbyterian missionary and Hindi expert Samuel H. Kellogg.
Lewis attended Oberlin High School, where he attended college lectures in chemistry. He went on to Swarthmore College and spent a year at Oxford University (1959–60), where he was tutored by Iris Murdoch and attended lectures by Gilbert Ryle, H. P. Grice, P. F. Strawson, and J. L. Austin. His year at Oxford played an important role in his decision to study philosophy. Lewis received his Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1967, where he studied under W. V. O. Quine, whose views he would later dispute. It was there he took a seminar with the Australian philosopher J. J. C. Smart. Smart recalled, "I taught David Lewis, or rather, he taught me."
Lewis joined the philosophy department at the University of California, Los Angeles, in 1966. In 1970, he moved to Princeton University, where he spent the remainder of his career.
Early work on convention
Lewis's first monograph was Convention: A Philosophical Study (1969), which is based on his doctoral dissertation and uses concepts of game theory to analyze the nature of social conventions. It won the American Philosophical Association's first Franklin Matchette Prize for the best book published in philosophy by a philosopher under 40. Lewis claimed that social conventions, such as the convention in most states that one drives on the right (not on the left), the convention that the original caller will re-call if a phone conversation is interrupted, etc., are solutions to so-called "'co-ordination problems'". Co-ordination problems were at the time of Lewis's book an under-discussed kind of game-theoretical problem; most game-theoretical discussion had centered on problems where the participants are in conflict, such as the prisoner's dilemma.
Co-ordination problems are problematic, for, though the participants have common interests, there are several solutions. Sometimes one of the solutions is "salient", a concept invented by the game-theorist and economist Thomas Schelling (by whom Lewis was much inspired). For example, a co-ordination problem that has the form of a meeting may have a salient solution if there is only one possible spot to meet in town. But in most cases, we must rely on what Lewis calls "precedent" for a salient solution. If both participants know that a particular co-ordination problem, say "which side should we drive on?", has been solved in the same way numerous times before, both know that both know this, both know that both know that both know this, etc. (this particular state Lewis calls common knowledge, and it has since been a frequent topic of discussion among philosophers and game theorists), then they will easily solve the problem. That they have solved the problem successfully will be seen by even more people, and thus the convention will spread in the society. A convention is thus a behavioral regularity that sustains itself because it serves the interests of everyone involved. Another important feature of a convention is that a convention could be entirely different: one could just as well drive on the left; it is more or less arbitrary that one drives on the right in the US, for example.
Lewis's main goal in the book, however, was not simply to provide an account of convention but rather to investigate the "platitude that language is ruled by convention" (Convention, p. 1.) The book's last two chapters (Signalling Systems and Conventions of Language; cf. also "Languages and Language", 1975) make the case that a population's use of a language consists of conventions of truthfulness and trust among its members. Lewis recasts in this framework notions such as truth and analyticity, claiming that they are better understood as relations between sentences and a language rather than as properties of sentences.
Counterfactuals and modal realism
Lewis went on to publish Counterfactuals (1973), which gives a modal analysis of the truth conditions of counterfactual conditionals in possible world semantics and the governing logic for such statements. According to Lewis, the counterfactual "If kangaroos had no tails they would topple over" is true if in all worlds most similar to the actual world where the antecedent "if kangaroos had no tails" is true, the consequent that kangaroos in fact topple over is also true. Lewis introduced the now standard "would" conditional operator ◻→ to capture these conditionals' logic. A sentence of the form A ◻→ C is true on Lewis's account for the same reasons given above. If there is a world maximally similar to ours where kangaroos lack tails but do not topple over, the counterfactual is false. The notion of similarity plays a crucial role in the analysis of the conditional. Intuitively, given the importance in our world of tails to kangaroos remaining upright, in the most similar worlds to ours where they have no tails they presumably topple over more frequently and so the counterfactual comes out true. This treatment of counterfactuals is closely related to an independently discovered account of conditionals by Robert Stalnaker, and so this kind of analysis is called Stalnaker-Lewis theory. The crucial areas of dispute between Stalnaker's account and Lewis's are whether these conditionals quantify over constant or variable domains (strict analysis vs. variable-domain analysis) and whether the Limit assumption should be included in the accompanying logic. Linguist Angelika Kratzer has developed a competing theory for counterfactual or subjunctive conditionals, "premise semantics", which aims to give a better heuristic for determining the truth of such statements in light of their often vague and context-sensitive meanings. Kratzer's premise semantics does not diverge from Lewis's for counterfactuals but aims to spread the analysis between context and similarity to give more accurate and concrete predictions for counterfactual truth conditions.
Realism about possible worlds
What made Lewis's views about counterfactuals controversial is that whereas Stalnaker treated possible worlds as imaginary entities, "made up" for the sake of theoretical convenience, Lewis adopted a position his formal account of counterfactuals did not commit him to, namely modal realism. On Lewis's formulation, when we speak of a world where I made the shot that in this world I missed, we are speaking of a world just as real as this one, and although we say that in that world I made the shot, more precisely it is not I but a counterpart of mine who was successful.
Lewis had already proposed this view in some of his earlier papers: "Counterpart Theory and Quantified Modal Logic" (1968), "Anselm and Actuality" (1970), and "Counterparts of Persons and their Bodies" (1971). The theory was widely considered implausible, but Lewis urged that it be taken seriously. Most often the idea that there exist infinitely many causally isolated universes, each as real as our own but different from it in some way, and that alluding to objects in this universe as necessary to explain what makes certain counterfactual statements true but not others, meets with what Lewis calls the "incredulous stare" (Lewis, On the Plurality of Worlds, 2005, pp. 135–137). He defends and elaborates his theory of extreme modal realism, while insisting that there is nothing extreme about it, in On the Plurality of Worlds (1986). Lewis acknowledges that his theory is contrary to common sense, but believes its advantages far outweigh this disadvantage, and that therefore we should not be hesitant to pay this price.
According to Lewis, "actual" is merely an indexical label we give a world when we are in it. Things are necessarily true when they are true in all possible worlds. (Lewis is not the first to speak of possible worlds in this context. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz and C.I. Lewis, for example, both speak of possible worlds as a way of thinking about possibility and necessity, and some of David Kaplan's early work is on the counterpart theory. Lewis's original suggestion was that all possible worlds are equally concrete, and the world in which we find ourselves is no realer than any other possible world.)
Criticisms
This theory has faced a number of criticisms. In particular, it is not clear how we could know what goes on in other worlds. After all, they are causally disconnected from ours; we can't look into them to see what is going on there. A related objection is that, while people are concerned with what they could have done, they are not concerned with what people in other worlds, no matter how similar to them, do. As Saul Kripke once put it, a presidential candidate could not care less whether someone else, in another world, wins an election, but does care whether he himself could have won it (Kripke 1980, p. 45).[citation needed]
Another criticism of the realist approach to possible worlds is that it has an inflated ontology—by extending the property of concreteness to more than the singular actual world it multiplies theoretical entities beyond what should be necessary to its explanatory aims, thereby violating the principle of parsimony, Occam's razor. But the opposite position could be taken on the view that the modal realist reduces the categories of possible worlds by eliminating the special case of the actual world as the exception to possible worlds as simple abstractions.
Possible worlds are employed in the work of Kripke and many others, but not in the concrete sense Lewis propounded. While none of these alternative approaches has found anything near universal acceptance, very few philosophers accept Lewis's brand of modal realism.
Influence
At Princeton, Lewis was a mentor of young philosophers and trained dozens of successful figures in the field, including several current Princeton faculty members, as well as people now teaching at a number of the leading philosophy departments in the U.S. Among his prominent students were Robert Brandom, L. A. Paul, J. David Velleman, Peter Railton, , , and Joshua Greene. His direct and indirect influence is evident in the work of many prominent philosophers of the current generation.
Later life and death
Lewis suffered from severe diabetes for much of his life, which eventually grew worse and led to kidney failure. In July 2000 he received a kidney transplant from his wife Stephanie. The transplant allowed him to work and travel for another year, before he died suddenly and unexpectedly from further complications of his diabetes, on October 14, 2001.
Since his death a number of posthumous papers have been published, on topics ranging from truth and causation to philosophy of physics. Lewisian Themes, a collection of papers on his philosophy, was published in 2004. A two-volume collection of his correspondence, Philosophical Letters of David K. Lewis, was published in 2020. A 2015 poll of philosophers conducted by Brian Leiter ranked Lewis the fourth most important Anglophone philosopher active between 1945 and 2000, behind only Quine, Kripke, and Rawls.
Works
Books
- Convention: A Philosophical Study, Harvard University Press 1969.
- Counterfactuals, Harvard University Press 1973; revised printing Blackwell 1986.
- On the Plurality of Worlds, Blackwell 1986.
- Parts of Classes, Blackwell 1991.
Lewis published five volumes containing 99 papers—almost all the papers he published in his lifetime. They discuss his counterfactual theory of causation, the concept of , a contextualist analysis of knowledge, and a dispositional value theory, among many other topics.
- Philosophical Papers, Vol. I (1983) includes his early work on counterpart theory and the philosophy of language and of mind.
- Philosophical Papers, Vol. II (1986) includes his work on counterfactuals, causation, and decision theory, where he promotes his about rational belief. Its preface discusses , the name Lewis gave to his overarching philosophical project.
- Papers in Philosophical Logic (1998).
- Papers in Metaphysics and Epistemology (1999) contains "Elusive Knowledge" and "Naming the Colours", honored by being reprinted in the Philosopher's Annual for the year they were first published.
- Papers in Ethics and Social Philosophy (2000).
Lewis's monograph Parts of Classes (1991), on the foundations of mathematics, sketched a reduction of set theory and Peano arithmetic to mereology and plural quantification. Very soon after its publication, Lewis became dissatisfied with some aspects of its argument; it is currently out of print (his paper "Mathematics is megethology", in Papers in Philosophical Logic, is partly a summary and partly a revision of "Parts of Classes")
Nachlass
- Lewis, David (2023-09-28). Janssen-Lauret, Frederique; MacBride, Fraser (eds.). Philosophical Manuscripts. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/oso/9780192847393.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-284739-3.
Selected papers
- "Counterpart Theory and Quantified Modal Logic", Journal of Philosophy 65 (1968): pp. 113–126.
- "General semantics", Synthese, 22(1) (1970): pp. 18–67.
- "Causation", Journal of Philosophy 70 (1973): pp. 556–67. Reprinted with postscripts in Philosophical Papers: Volume II (1986).
- "Semantic Analyses for Dyadic Deontic Logic" in Logical Theory and Semantic Analysis: Essays Dedicated to Stig Kanger on His Fiftieth Birthday, Reidel 1974.
- "The Paradoxes of Time Travel", American Philosophical Quarterly, April (1976): pp. 145–152.
- "Truth in Fiction", American Philosophical Quarterly 15 (1978): pp. 37–46.
- "How to Define Theoretical Terms", Journal of Philosophy 67 (1979): pp. 427–46.
- "Scorekeeping in a Language Game", Journal of Philosophical Logic 8 (1979): pp. 339–59.
- "Mad pain and Martian pain", Readings in the Philosophy of Psychology Vol. I. N. Block, ed. Harvard University Press (1980): pp. 216–222.
- "A Subjectivist's Guide to Objective Chance", in R. Jeffrey, ed., Studies in Inductive Logic and Probability: Volume II. Reprinted with postscripts in Philosophical Papers: Volume II (1986).
- "Are We Free to Break the Laws?" Theoria 47 (1981): pp. 113–21.
- "New Work for a Theory of Universals", Australasian Journal of Philosophy 61 (1983): pp. 343–77.
- "What Experience Teaches", in Mind and Cognition by William G. Lycan, (1990 Ed.) pp. 499–519. Article omitted from subsequent editions.
- "Elusive Knowledge", Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 74/4 (1996): pp. 549–567.
See also
- American philosophy
- Bayesian epistemology
- List of American philosophers
- Canberra Plan
- Causal model
- Conversational scoreboard
- Counterfactuals
- Extended modal realism
- Formal semantics (natural language)
- Humeanism § Causality and necessity
- Lewis's triviality result
- Modal realism
- Possible world
References
- "Review of Gonzalo Rodriguez-Pereyra, Resemblance Nominalism: A Solution to the Problem of Universals" – ndpr.nd.edu
- Lewis, D. K. 1986. On the Plurality of Worlds Oxford: Blackwell.
- Wolterstorff, Nicholas (November 2007). "A Life in Philosophy". Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association. 81 (2): 93–106. JSTOR 27653995.
- "David Lewis". The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University. 2021.
- Stefano Gattei, Thomas Kuhn's 'Linguistic Turn' and the Legacy of Logical Empiricism: Incommensurability, Rationality and the Search for Truth, Ashgate Publishing, 2012, p. 122 n. 232.
- "On Quantitative and Qualitative Parsimony" by Maciej Sendłak, Metaphilosophy 49(1–2):153–166 (2018).
- "David Lewis's Metaphysics"
- French, Rohan (2016). "An Argument for the Ontological Innocence of Mereology". Erkenntnis. 81 (4): 683–704. doi:10.1007/s10670-015-9762-x.
- Guglielmi, Giorgia (1 August 2017). "Philosophy journal corrects 35-year-old article 'written' by a cat". Science.
- Princeton Alumni Weekly, Volume 42, Princeton University Press, 1941.
- O'Grady, Jane (2001-10-23). "David Lewis". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2023-03-22.
- Kratzer, Angelika (2012). Modals and Conditionals: New and Revised Perspectives. Oxford University press. pp. chapter 3. ISBN 9780199234691.
- Robert Stalnaker, Inquiry, MIT Press, 1984, p. 49: "But if other possible worlds are causally disconnected from us, how do we know anything about them?"
- "Naming and Necessity". In Semantics of Natural Language, edited by D. Davidson and G. Harman. Reidel, 1980 (1972), pp. 253–355.
- "David Kellogg Lewis". The New York Times. October 20, 2001.
- Weatherson, Brian (2005-08-02). "Review of Lewisian Themes: The Philosophy of David K. Lewis". Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews. ISSN 1538-1617.
- Leiter, Brian. "Most Important Anglophone philosophers, 1945-2000: the top 20". Leiter Reports: A Philosophy Blog. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
- Originally in Lewis, David (1980). "A Subjectivist's Guide to Objective Chance". In Jeffrey, R. (ed.). Studies in Inductive Logic and Probability. Vol. 2. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 263–293. ISBN 0-520-03826-6.
Further reading
- Weatherson, Brian. "David Lewis". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
- Hall, Ned. "David Lewis's Metaphysics". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
- Dixon, Scott. "David Lewis". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
- Nolan, Daniel Patrick (2005). David Lewis. Chesham [U.K.]: Acumen.
- Loewer, Barry; Schaffer, Jonathan, eds. (2015). A Companion to David Lewis. Oxford, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. doi:10.1002/9781118398593
External links
- Service of Remembrance Friday, February 8, 2002 – Princeton University Chapel at the Wayback Machine (archived October 3, 2003)
- Photos from the weekend of the memorial service for David Lewis in Princeton, February 2002
This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources David Lewis philosopher news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2010 Learn how and when to remove this message This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message David Kellogg Lewis September 28 1941 October 14 2001 was an American philosopher Lewis taught briefly at UCLA and then at Princeton University from 1970 until his death He is closely associated with Australia whose philosophical community he visited almost annually for more than 30 years David LewisLewis in 1962 while at Swarthmore CollegeBornDavid Kellogg Lewis September 28 1941 Oberlin Ohio U S DiedOctober 14 2001 aged 60 Princeton New Jersey U S Other namesBruce Le CattEducationSwarthmore College BA Oxford University Harvard University PhD SpouseStephanie Lewis m 1965 2001 Era20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolAnalytic Nominalism PerdurantismInstitutionsPrinceton UniversityDoctoral advisorWillard Van Orman QuineOther academic advisorsDonald Cary Williams Iris MurdochDoctoral studentsRobert Brandom Peter Railton J David VellemanMain interestsLogic Language Metaphysics Epistemology EthicsNotable ideasPossible worlds Modal realism Counterfactuals Counterpart theory Lewis signaling game The endurantism perdurantism distinction Descriptive causal theory of reference De se Qualitative vs quantitative parsimony Ramsey Lewis method Gunk Ontological innocence Centered world Lewis made significant contributions in philosophy of mind philosophy of probability epistemology philosophical logic aesthetics philosophy of mathematics philosophy of time and philosophy of science In most of these fields he is considered among the most important figures of recent decades Lewis is most famous for his work in metaphysics philosophy of language and semantics in which his books On the Plurality of Worlds 1986 and Counterfactuals 1973 are considered classics His works on the logic and semantics of counterfactual conditionals are broadly used by philosophers and linguists along with a competing account from Robert Stalnaker together the Stalnaker Lewis theory of counterfactuals has become perhaps the most pervasive and influential account of its type in the philosophical and linguistic literature His metaphysics incorporated seminal contributions to quantified modal logic the development of counterpart theory counterfactual causation and the position called Humean supervenience Most comprehensively in On the Plurality of Worlds Lewis defended modal realism the view that possible worlds exist as concrete entities in logical space and that our world is one among many equally real possible ones Early life and educationLewis was born in Oberlin Ohio to John D Lewis a professor of government at Oberlin College and Ruth Ewart Kellogg Lewis a medieval historian He was the grandson of the Presbyterian minister Edwin Henry Kellogg and the great grandson of the Presbyterian missionary and Hindi expert Samuel H Kellogg Lewis attended Oberlin High School where he attended college lectures in chemistry He went on to Swarthmore College and spent a year at Oxford University 1959 60 where he was tutored by Iris Murdoch and attended lectures by Gilbert Ryle H P Grice P F Strawson and J L Austin His year at Oxford played an important role in his decision to study philosophy Lewis received his Ph D from Harvard University in 1967 where he studied under W V O Quine whose views he would later dispute It was there he took a seminar with the Australian philosopher J J C Smart Smart recalled I taught David Lewis or rather he taught me Lewis joined the philosophy department at the University of California Los Angeles in 1966 In 1970 he moved to Princeton University where he spent the remainder of his career Early work on conventionLewis s first monograph was Convention A Philosophical Study 1969 which is based on his doctoral dissertation and uses concepts of game theory to analyze the nature of social conventions It won the American Philosophical Association s first Franklin Matchette Prize for the best book published in philosophy by a philosopher under 40 Lewis claimed that social conventions such as the convention in most states that one drives on the right not on the left the convention that the original caller will re call if a phone conversation is interrupted etc are solutions to so called co ordination problems Co ordination problems were at the time of Lewis s book an under discussed kind of game theoretical problem most game theoretical discussion had centered on problems where the participants are in conflict such as the prisoner s dilemma Co ordination problems are problematic for though the participants have common interests there are several solutions Sometimes one of the solutions is salient a concept invented by the game theorist and economist Thomas Schelling by whom Lewis was much inspired For example a co ordination problem that has the form of a meeting may have a salient solution if there is only one possible spot to meet in town But in most cases we must rely on what Lewis calls precedent for a salient solution If both participants know that a particular co ordination problem say which side should we drive on has been solved in the same way numerous times before both know that both know this both know that both know that both know this etc this particular state Lewis calls common knowledge and it has since been a frequent topic of discussion among philosophers and game theorists then they will easily solve the problem That they have solved the problem successfully will be seen by even more people and thus the convention will spread in the society A convention is thus a behavioral regularity that sustains itself because it serves the interests of everyone involved Another important feature of a convention is that a convention could be entirely different one could just as well drive on the left it is more or less arbitrary that one drives on the right in the US for example Lewis s main goal in the book however was not simply to provide an account of convention but rather to investigate the platitude that language is ruled by convention Convention p 1 The book s last two chapters Signalling Systems and Conventions of Language cf also Languages and Language 1975 make the case that a population s use of a language consists of conventions of truthfulness and trust among its members Lewis recasts in this framework notions such as truth and analyticity claiming that they are better understood as relations between sentences and a language rather than as properties of sentences Counterfactuals and modal realismLewis went on to publish Counterfactuals 1973 which gives a modal analysis of the truth conditions of counterfactual conditionals in possible world semantics and the governing logic for such statements According to Lewis the counterfactual If kangaroos had no tails they would topple over is true if in all worlds most similar to the actual world where the antecedent if kangaroos had no tails is true the consequent that kangaroos in fact topple over is also true Lewis introduced the now standard would conditional operator to capture these conditionals logic A sentence of the form A C is true on Lewis s account for the same reasons given above If there is a world maximally similar to ours where kangaroos lack tails but do not topple over the counterfactual is false The notion of similarity plays a crucial role in the analysis of the conditional Intuitively given the importance in our world of tails to kangaroos remaining upright in the most similar worlds to ours where they have no tails they presumably topple over more frequently and so the counterfactual comes out true This treatment of counterfactuals is closely related to an independently discovered account of conditionals by Robert Stalnaker and so this kind of analysis is called Stalnaker Lewis theory The crucial areas of dispute between Stalnaker s account and Lewis s are whether these conditionals quantify over constant or variable domains strict analysis vs variable domain analysis and whether the Limit assumption should be included in the accompanying logic Linguist Angelika Kratzer has developed a competing theory for counterfactual or subjunctive conditionals premise semantics which aims to give a better heuristic for determining the truth of such statements in light of their often vague and context sensitive meanings Kratzer s premise semantics does not diverge from Lewis s for counterfactuals but aims to spread the analysis between context and similarity to give more accurate and concrete predictions for counterfactual truth conditions Realism about possible worlds What made Lewis s views about counterfactuals controversial is that whereas Stalnaker treated possible worlds as imaginary entities made up for the sake of theoretical convenience Lewis adopted a position his formal account of counterfactuals did not commit him to namely modal realism On Lewis s formulation when we speak of a world where I made the shot that in this world I missed we are speaking of a world just as real as this one and although we say that in that world I made the shot more precisely it is not I but a counterpart of mine who was successful Lewis had already proposed this view in some of his earlier papers Counterpart Theory and Quantified Modal Logic 1968 Anselm and Actuality 1970 and Counterparts of Persons and their Bodies 1971 The theory was widely considered implausible but Lewis urged that it be taken seriously Most often the idea that there exist infinitely many causally isolated universes each as real as our own but different from it in some way and that alluding to objects in this universe as necessary to explain what makes certain counterfactual statements true but not others meets with what Lewis calls the incredulous stare Lewis On the Plurality of Worlds 2005 pp 135 137 He defends and elaborates his theory of extreme modal realism while insisting that there is nothing extreme about it in On the Plurality of Worlds 1986 Lewis acknowledges that his theory is contrary to common sense but believes its advantages far outweigh this disadvantage and that therefore we should not be hesitant to pay this price According to Lewis actual is merely an indexical label we give a world when we are in it Things are necessarily true when they are true in all possible worlds Lewis is not the first to speak of possible worlds in this context Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz and C I Lewis for example both speak of possible worlds as a way of thinking about possibility and necessity and some of David Kaplan s early work is on the counterpart theory Lewis s original suggestion was that all possible worlds are equally concrete and the world in which we find ourselves is no realer than any other possible world Criticisms This theory has faced a number of criticisms In particular it is not clear how we could know what goes on in other worlds After all they are causally disconnected from ours we can t look into them to see what is going on there A related objection is that while people are concerned with what they could have done they are not concerned with what people in other worlds no matter how similar to them do As Saul Kripke once put it a presidential candidate could not care less whether someone else in another world wins an election but does care whether he himself could have won it Kripke 1980 p 45 citation needed Another criticism of the realist approach to possible worlds is that it has an inflated ontology by extending the property of concreteness to more than the singular actual world it multiplies theoretical entities beyond what should be necessary to its explanatory aims thereby violating the principle of parsimony Occam s razor But the opposite position could be taken on the view that the modal realist reduces the categories of possible worlds by eliminating the special case of the actual world as the exception to possible worlds as simple abstractions Possible worlds are employed in the work of Kripke and many others but not in the concrete sense Lewis propounded While none of these alternative approaches has found anything near universal acceptance very few philosophers accept Lewis s brand of modal realism Influence At Princeton Lewis was a mentor of young philosophers and trained dozens of successful figures in the field including several current Princeton faculty members as well as people now teaching at a number of the leading philosophy departments in the U S Among his prominent students were Robert Brandom L A Paul J David Velleman Peter Railton and Joshua Greene His direct and indirect influence is evident in the work of many prominent philosophers of the current generation Later life and deathLewis suffered from severe diabetes for much of his life which eventually grew worse and led to kidney failure In July 2000 he received a kidney transplant from his wife Stephanie The transplant allowed him to work and travel for another year before he died suddenly and unexpectedly from further complications of his diabetes on October 14 2001 Since his death a number of posthumous papers have been published on topics ranging from truth and causation to philosophy of physics Lewisian Themes a collection of papers on his philosophy was published in 2004 A two volume collection of his correspondence Philosophical Letters of David K Lewis was published in 2020 A 2015 poll of philosophers conducted by Brian Leiter ranked Lewis the fourth most important Anglophone philosopher active between 1945 and 2000 behind only Quine Kripke and Rawls WorksBooks Convention A Philosophical Study Harvard University Press 1969 Counterfactuals Harvard University Press 1973 revised printing Blackwell 1986 On the Plurality of Worlds Blackwell 1986 Parts of Classes Blackwell 1991 Lewis published five volumes containing 99 papers almost all the papers he published in his lifetime They discuss his counterfactual theory of causation the concept of a contextualist analysis of knowledge and a dispositional value theory among many other topics Philosophical Papers Vol I 1983 includes his early work on counterpart theory and the philosophy of language and of mind Philosophical Papers Vol II 1986 includes his work on counterfactuals causation and decision theory where he promotes his about rational belief Its preface discusses the name Lewis gave to his overarching philosophical project Papers in Philosophical Logic 1998 Papers in Metaphysics and Epistemology 1999 contains Elusive Knowledge and Naming the Colours honored by being reprinted in the Philosopher s Annual for the year they were first published Papers in Ethics and Social Philosophy 2000 Lewis s monograph Parts of Classes 1991 on the foundations of mathematics sketched a reduction of set theory and Peano arithmetic to mereology and plural quantification Very soon after its publication Lewis became dissatisfied with some aspects of its argument it is currently out of print his paper Mathematics is megethology in Papers in Philosophical Logic is partly a summary and partly a revision of Parts of Classes Nachlass Lewis David 2023 09 28 Janssen Lauret Frederique MacBride Fraser eds Philosophical Manuscripts Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 oso 9780192847393 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 284739 3 Selected papers Counterpart Theory and Quantified Modal Logic Journal of Philosophy 65 1968 pp 113 126 General semantics Synthese 22 1 1970 pp 18 67 Causation Journal of Philosophy 70 1973 pp 556 67 Reprinted with postscripts in Philosophical Papers Volume II 1986 Semantic Analyses for Dyadic Deontic Logic in Logical Theory and Semantic Analysis Essays Dedicated to Stig Kanger on His Fiftieth Birthday Reidel 1974 The Paradoxes of Time Travel American Philosophical Quarterly April 1976 pp 145 152 Truth in Fiction American Philosophical Quarterly 15 1978 pp 37 46 How to Define Theoretical Terms Journal of Philosophy 67 1979 pp 427 46 Scorekeeping in a Language Game Journal of Philosophical Logic 8 1979 pp 339 59 Mad pain and Martian pain Readings in the Philosophy of Psychology Vol I N Block ed Harvard University Press 1980 pp 216 222 A Subjectivist s Guide to Objective Chance in R Jeffrey ed Studies in Inductive Logic and Probability Volume II Reprinted with postscripts in Philosophical Papers Volume II 1986 Are We Free to Break the Laws Theoria 47 1981 pp 113 21 New Work for a Theory of Universals Australasian Journal of Philosophy 61 1983 pp 343 77 What Experience Teaches in Mind and Cognition by William G Lycan 1990 Ed pp 499 519 Article omitted from subsequent editions Elusive Knowledge Australasian Journal of Philosophy 74 4 1996 pp 549 567 See alsoAmerican philosophy Bayesian epistemology List of American philosophers Canberra Plan Causal model Conversational scoreboard Counterfactuals Extended modal realism Formal semantics natural language Humeanism Causality and necessity Lewis s triviality result Modal realism Possible worldReferences Review of Gonzalo Rodriguez Pereyra Resemblance Nominalism A Solution to the Problem of Universals ndpr nd edu Lewis D K 1986 On the Plurality of Worlds Oxford Blackwell Wolterstorff Nicholas November 2007 A Life in Philosophy Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 81 2 93 106 JSTOR 27653995 David Lewis The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University 2021 Stefano Gattei Thomas Kuhn s Linguistic Turn and the Legacy of Logical Empiricism Incommensurability Rationality and the Search for Truth Ashgate Publishing 2012 p 122 n 232 On Quantitative and Qualitative Parsimony by Maciej Sendlak Metaphilosophy 49 1 2 153 166 2018 David Lewis s Metaphysics French Rohan 2016 An Argument for the Ontological Innocence of Mereology Erkenntnis 81 4 683 704 doi 10 1007 s10670 015 9762 x Guglielmi Giorgia 1 August 2017 Philosophy journal corrects 35 year old article written by a cat Science Princeton Alumni Weekly Volume 42 Princeton University Press 1941 O Grady Jane 2001 10 23 David Lewis The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2023 03 22 Kratzer Angelika 2012 Modals and Conditionals New and Revised Perspectives Oxford University press pp chapter 3 ISBN 9780199234691 Robert Stalnaker Inquiry MIT Press 1984 p 49 But if other possible worlds are causally disconnected from us how do we know anything about them Naming and Necessity In Semantics of Natural Language edited by D Davidson and G Harman Reidel 1980 1972 pp 253 355 David Kellogg Lewis The New York Times October 20 2001 Weatherson Brian 2005 08 02 Review of Lewisian Themes The Philosophy of David K Lewis Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews ISSN 1538 1617 Leiter Brian Most Important Anglophone philosophers 1945 2000 the top 20 Leiter Reports A Philosophy Blog Retrieved 6 September 2020 Originally in Lewis David 1980 A Subjectivist s Guide to Objective Chance In Jeffrey R ed Studies in Inductive Logic and Probability Vol 2 Berkeley University of California Press pp 263 293 ISBN 0 520 03826 6 Further readingWeatherson Brian David Lewis In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Hall Ned David Lewis s Metaphysics In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Dixon Scott David Lewis Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Nolan Daniel Patrick 2005 David Lewis Chesham U K Acumen Loewer Barry Schaffer Jonathan eds 2015 A Companion to David Lewis Oxford UK John Wiley amp Sons Ltd doi 10 1002 9781118398593External linksService of Remembrance Friday February 8 2002 Princeton University Chapel at the Wayback Machine archived October 3 2003 Photos from the weekend of the memorial service for David Lewis in Princeton February 2002