4.9 KiB
4.9 KiB
Proof of Extended Modal Realism
Step 1: From Formal Describability to Ontological Identity
- A formal system is a set of axioms, inference rules, and symbols capable of expressing truths about a domain.
- If a domain (like reality) can be fully and self-sufficiently described by a formal system — such that no semantic interpretation or metaphysical foundation is required beyond that system — then nothing external to the system is needed to account for the domain’s structure.
- In such a case, the system is not merely a model of the domain; it is the domain in structure and function.
Conclusion 1: If something is fully and self-sufficiently describable by a formal system, it is that formal system in ontological terms.
Step 2: Material Embedding Principle
- A complete and exhaustively accurate model of the universe must be materially embedded within the universe and composed of the same physical constituents, subject to the same physical laws and limitations, in order to fully instantiate all features of that universe. For example, Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle would require the universe itself in order to accurately model the universe.
- Such a model of the universe is possible in principle since the universe exists.
- Therefore, the universe itself such a fully and self-sufficiently described formal system.
Step 3: Empiricism Treats Reality as a Formal System
- Empiricism defines reality as the totality of all true facts, whether known or knowable in principle.
- These facts are formalizable — expressible in statements, equations, or logical propositions.
- Empiricism implicitly positions itself as a closed system: all truths must be derivable from empirical data and logical analysis of that data. All explanations on empiricism must come from within empiricism (experience and logic), not from outside it. Empiricism is therefore a self-sufficient system.
- Empiricism allows no external metaphysical assumptions: only that which can be inferred from experience or reason about experience.
Conclusion 2: Empiricism treats reality as a self-contained formal system — precisely the kind of system described in Step 1.
Step 4: Gödel’s Incompleteness Theorem Applies
- Gödel’s first incompleteness theorem: any consistent formal system expressive enough to contain arithmetic is incomplete — there are true statements contained within it that it cannot prove.
- Physical reality includes arithmetic (e.g., counting, causality, measurement), so any formal system modeling it must include arithmetic.
- Therefore, if reality is a formal system (as empiricism claims), it must be either incomplete or inconsistent.
- But a Theory of Everything (ToE) must be both complete and consistent by definition, otherwise it cannot be a ToE.
Conclusion 3: Empiricism is incompatible with the existence of a complete and consistent ToE, and therefore cannot be correct as a fundamental metaphysical framework.
Step 5: The Collapse of Empiricism Leaves PSR as the Only Coherent Framework
- Rejection of empiricism eliminates the epistemic framework that allows for brute facts without justification.
- Two options remain:
- (A) Affirm the Principle of Sufficient Reason (PSR): every fact has a reason, demanding total intelligibility.
- (B) Deny both empiricism and PSR: accept brute facts arbitrarily, abandoning explanation.
- Option B collapses into metaphysical incoherence, as it cannot provide any foundation for explanation or knowledge.
Conclusion 4: PSR is the only coherent explanatory principle left once empiricism is rejected.
Step 6: Only EMR Satisfies the PSR Without Exception
- Any theory that excludes certain possibilities (e.g., only consistent worlds exist, only lawful structures exist) must explain why those exclusions hold.
- If those constraints cannot be explained from within the theory, they are unjustified assumptions — violating the PSR.
- Extended Modal Realism (EMR) posits that:
- All possible, impossible, and incoherent worlds exist;
- Nothing is excluded;
- There are no privileged laws, axioms, or constraints.
- EMR does not try to prove consistency from within; it avoids the trap of formal closure entirely by admitting everything into existence.
Conclusion 5: Only EMR satisfies the PSR for all facts, because it has no unexplained constraints, and excludes nothing.
✅ Final Conclusion
- Empiricism treats reality as a formal system.
- Formal systems are incomplete (Gödel).
- Therefore, empiricism is false.
- If empiricism is false, only PSR remains as a coherent metaphysical framework.
- The PSR demands complete explanation for all facts.
- Only EMR satisfies the PSR without exception or assumption.
∴ EMR is necessarily true.