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Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Notes to Dialectical School
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Notes

1. According to Aristotle, some Megarian philosophers maintained that the possibility of an event implies its actuality (Aristotle, Metaphysics Θ 3 1046b29-32). Perhaps Diodorus endeavored to keep the spirit of this concept of possibility.

2. ‘If a proposition neither is nor will be true, then it has been the case that the corresponding state of affairs will never be the case’ would be more precise. However, in Cicero, On Fate 13 and 17, in a related context, we find a switch from something’s being true to its being the case similar to (VI).

3. Assuming that the proposition ‘It has always been the case that I will be in Corinth (at some time)’ in (4) is at least materially equivalent to the contradictory of the proposition ‘It has been the case (at some time) that I will never be in Corinth’ in (3).

Copyright © 2004
Susanne Bobzien
susanne.bobzien@yale.edu

Notes to Dialectical School
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy