Forgie 1975
Forgie 1975
Forgie 1975
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CANADIAN JOURNAL OF PHILOSOPHY
Volume V, Number 4, December 1975
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Kant and "Is Existence a Predicate?"
4 I shall assume that concepts are instantiated only by things which exist.
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cur that if they exist they contain one more predicate . . ."). We can set
out this argument as follows:
Argument A:
(1) It is possible to have a complete concept of a merely possible
being, N;
(2) Existence cannot be included in a concept of a merely possible
being;
(3) Therefore, if N were to exist, existence would not be one of its
predicates.
Argument B:
(1) It is possible to have a complete concept of a merely possible
being, N;
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Kant and Is Existence a Predicate?
Consider now the following two passages from the first Critique:
(A) ... the real contains no more than the merely possible. A hundred real thalers do
not contain the least coin more than a hundred possible thalers. For as the latter
signify the concept, and the former the object and the positing of the object, should
the former contain more than the latter, my concept would not, in that case, express
the whole object, and would not therefore be an adequate concept of it. My finan-
cial position is, however, affected very differently by a hundred real thalers than it is
by the mere concept of them (that is, of their possibility). For the object, as it actually
exists, is not analytically contained in my concept, but is added to my concept
(which is a determination of my state) synthetically; and yet the conceived hundred
thalers are not themselves in the least increased through thus acquiring existence
outside my concept.6
-
(B) By whatever and by however many predicates we may think a thing even if we
-
completely determine it we do not make the least addition to the thing when we
further declare that this thing is. Otherwise, it would not be exactly the same thing
that exists, but something more than we had thought in the concept; and we could
not, therefore, say that the exact object of my concept exists. (B628)
6 Critique of Pure Reason, tr. by Norman Kemp Smith (London, 1958), B627.
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stance of the concern, which we have already noted, with one's con-
- in this
cept of a thing and the predicates included "in" that concept
case a concern with my concept of the hundred real thalers on my
desk and the predicates7 included in that concept.
Passage A appears to contain a reductio. A certain supposition, viz.,
that the thalers on my desk "contain more" than my concept of them,
is rejected because it leads to an absurdity, viz., that my concept would
not "express the whole object" and so would not be an "adequate"
concept of it. Presumably an "adequate" concept is one which "ex-
presses" the "whole" object. Now I do not know what it wou Id be for a
concept to express the whole object unless that means that that con-
cept is a complete one. In the present case, my concept of the hundred
real thalers would express the whole hundred real thalers if, and only
if, every predicate of the hundred real thalers were included in my
concept of them.
But here there is a problem in interpreting Kant. For he appears to
be arguing as follows:
(1) If the hundred real thalers have more predicates than are in-
cluded in my concept of them, then my concept of them will fail to
"express the whole" hundred real thalers, i.e., my concept will not
be complete;
7 Kant's claim that the hundred real thalers "do not contain the least coin more"
than the hundred possible thalers may misleadingly suggest that he is interested
only in comparing the number of coins of the real and the possible thalers. But I
take him merely to be mentioning an example of a respect in which one hun-
dred real and one hundred possible thalers are alike. For passage II begins with
the claim that "the real contains no more than the merely possible." And this
seems to commit Kant not just to the view that one hundred real and one hun-
dred possible thalers contain the same number of coins (or that they each have
the predicate "containing one hundred coins" or "being one hundred in
number"). It seems to commit him also to the view that any predicate "con-
tained" by the real thalers is also contained by the possible thalers. Of course,
just how this enters into his argument remains to be seen.
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Kant and "Is Existence a Predicate?"
(1a) If the hundred real thalers have more predicates than are, as
a matter of fact, included in my concept of them then my concept
of them will, as a matter of fact, not be complete.
For then (2) will be false: there is nothing absurd in the suggestion that
my concept of the hundred real thalers happens, as a matter of fact,
not to be complete. Probably all my concepts of individuals (or sets of
individuals) fail to be complete. In order to give Kant's argument more
plausibility we should not hear (1) in the sense of (1a). Perhaps the
most plausible argument emerges when we take (1) as :
Now (2) may not be so implausible. It amounts to the claim, not that
any concept of the hundred real thalers is a complete one, but only
that it is possible to have a complete concept of the hundred real
thalers.
But even if we take (1) in the sense of (1b), the reductio argument
allows us to conclude only that the hundred real thalers do not have
any predicate that could not be included in a concept of them. Such a
conclusion would be an instance of the general claim that no real ob-
ject has any predicate that could not be included in a concept of it. But
that claim could be used to show that existence is not a predicate of
any real object only if we make the additional assumption that ex-
istence cannot be included in any concept of a thing. Perhaps Kant is
expressing this additional assumption when he says that "the object, as
it actually exists, is not analytically contained in my concept/' But
however we understand those words, it is clear that this additional
assumption must be made. The reductio argument, by itself, will not
show that existence is not a predicate.
In passage B we have another reductio argument. We are asked to
form a concept of a thing, N. Now suppose we say "N is" or"N exists."
Are we claiming that N has some predicate (presumably existence) ad-
ditional to those predicates included in our concept? Kant's answer is
"no." Existence is not a predicate of the actual N additional to those
predicates included in our concept. To suppose otherwise leads to an
absurdity. For if existence were a predicate of the actual N additional
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to those predicates included in our concept, then the thing that exists,
N itself, would have a predicate not included in our concept, and we
could not truly say that the actual N has just exactly those predicates -
and no more - included in our concept. Kant evidently regards this
consequence as absurd. We must therefore reject the supposition that
led to it, viz., that existence is a predicate of the actual N additional to
those predicates included in our concept.
Now there is a problem of interpretation here, just like the one in
the "thalers" passage. For Kant appears to be arguing as follows:
If (1) is heard as (1a) then (2) seems false. There is nothing absurd in the
supposition that our concept of N is, as a matter of fact, incomplete,
i.e., that the actual N has more predicates than are included in our
concept of it. Kant's argument will be more plausible if we hear (1) as:
Now (2) can be heard as a way of saying that it is possible to have a com-
plete concept of N, a concept such that the actual N has just exactly
those predicates - and no more - which are included in our concept.
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Kant and "/s Existence a Predicate?''
But even if we hear (1) in the sense of (1b), the argument we are
considering will be as inconclusive as the reductio argument in the
"thalers" passage. For the conclusion of this present argument will
only be that existence is not a predicate of any being additional to
those predicates which could in principle be included in a concept of
that being. But from this it follows only that if existence is a predicate of
some being it could in principle be included in a concept of it. And
that claim cannot be used to show that existence is not a predicate of
any being unless we make the additional assumption that existence
cannot be included in any concept of a thing.
Kant's famous claim, "the real contains no more than the merely
possible/' his suggestion that we can say that the exact object of our
concept exists, and his rejection of the idea that perhaps my concept
of a thing fails to "express the whole object/' will all seem wrong if we
hear them as various ways of claiming that all our concepts are, as a
matter of fact, complete ones. I have been suggesting that we perhaps
hear them instead as ways of claiming that it is possible to have a com-
plete concept of any being. But even this claim, by itself, will not entail
that existence is not a predicate. To get that conclusion we must make
the additional assumption that existence cannot be in any concept of a
thing.
Thus if we interpret the reductio arguments in the two passages
from the first Critique as charitably as possible, and if we conjoin the
conclusions of those arguments with the assumption that existence
cannot be in any concept of a thing, we can perhaps attribute to Kant
the following argument that existence is not a predicate:
Argument C:
(1) It is possible to have a complete concept of a thing, N;
(2) Existence cannot be in any concept of a thing;
(3) Therefore, if N exists, existence is not one of its predicates.
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and (c) the predicates that could be possessed by the object of a con-
cept of N when that object is a merely possible being. The supposition
that existence is a predicate is rejected because it ultimately leads to
conflict with Dl. To show that there is such a conflict, Kant employs
certain assumptions about existence, viz., (1) that existence cannot be
included in the concept of a merely possible being; (2) that existence
cannot be possessed by the merely possible object of a concept; and
(3) that existence cannot be included in any concept of a thing. In
argument A the conclusion that existence is not a predicate follows
from (1) together with parts (a) and (b) of Dl. In argument B that con-
clusion follows from (2) together with parts (a) and (c) of Dl. And in
argument C the same conclusion is entailed by (3) together with parts
(a) and (b) of Dl.
Let us take an example of something we would unquestionably
regard as a predicate of a thing, say "being white." If Kant's arguments
are to succeed, we ought not to be able to use the same sorts of
arguments to show that "being white" is not a predicate. But we will be
able to use them in this way unless at least one of the three assump-
tions just mentioned serves to distinguish existence from "being
white." Thus it seems clear, for example, that argument A will not be
successful unless it is true that:
(P2) "being white" can, while existence cannot, belong to the ob-
ject of a concept when that object is a merely possible being.
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Kant and "Is Existence a Predicate?"
II
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in other words, that nothing which exists has the predicates P-pP2> -
Pn, i.e., that God's concept has no instance.8
It is implausible, however, to suppose that, for Kant, the question
of whether existence canbe"in"thisorthatsortofconcept,orwhether
it can be in any concept at all, is to be understood in the sense just dis-
cussed. I believe he understands these matters in quite a different way.
Kant many times makes a claim that we might put as follows: no matter
how rich our concept of a thing, no matter what predicates are, in the
weak sense, included in that concept, nothing so included can insure
or guarantee that its object exists or is an actual being:
In whatever manner the understanding may have arrived at a concept, the ex-
istence of its object is never, by any process of analysis, discoverable within it; for
the knowledge of the existence of the object consists precisely in the fact that the
object is posited in itself, beyond the [mere] thought of it. (B667)
Whatever, therefore, and however much our concept of an object may contain,
we must go outside it, if we are to ascribe existence to the object. (B629)
Even when the concept of a thing is quite complete, I can still inquire whether
this object is merely possible, or is also actual .... (B266)9
Kant puts this claim in other ways. He says that no "mark" of the ex-
istence of the object can be found in the concept of it:
In the mere concept of a thing no mark of its existence is to be found. For though
it may be so complete that nothing which is required for thinking the thing with all
its inner determinations is lacking to it, yet existence has nothing to do with all this,
but only with the question whether such a thing be so given us that the perception
of it can, if need be, precede the concept. (B272)
And he also puts the claim by saying that existence is never one of the
predicates included in a concept of a thing. In "Beweisgrund," for ex-
ample, he warns that one should not:
... attempt to derive existence from merely possible concepts, as one is ac-
customed to doing when attempting to prove absolutely necessary existence. For
one would then be looking in vain among the predicates of such a possible being -
existence cannot be found among them. (p. 76)
8 This kind of argument was used by Aquinas and by Caterus in attacking versions
of the ontological argument. It has recently been given forceful expression by
Jerome Shaffer in "Existence, Predication and the Ontological Argument,"
Mind, vol. LXXI(1962), pp. 307-325.
9 "
Perhaps we can also include here the remark in the "thalers" passage: ... the
object as it actually exists, is not analytically contained in my concept... ."
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Kant and Is Existence a Predicate?
Let us say that <t>is in a concept in the "strong" sense just in case
something which is in that concept, in the weak sense, insures that its
object has <i>. I am going to assume that Kant holds that existence can
never be included in the concept of a thing and that he means this in
the strong sense. He means that nothing which is weakly included in
the concept of a thing can insure that its object exists, that it is an actual
being.10 It will then be trivially true that existence cannot be in the con-
cept of a merely possible being. If, for example, something weakly in-
cluded in God's concept of Caesar insured that Caesar was an actual
being, then God's concept would not be a concept of a merely possi-
ble being.
But now what about the claim that "being white" can, but ex-
istence cannot, be in a concept of a merely possible being? If this claim
is to reveal a difference between "being white" and existence, then
the sense in which "being white" can be in such a concept should be
the same as that in which existence cannot. So far, however, it seems
that, in the weak sense, both "being white" and existence can be in a
concept of a merely possible being. But in the strong sense existence
cannot be in such a concept. Can it be shown that "being white"
differs from existence precisely in this, that it, unlike existence, can in
the strong sense, be in a concept of a merely possible being?
I do not believe this can be shown. So far as I can see, the following
is the most likely way in which one might be led to think that it can:
"Suppose that prior to creation God has a concept of Caesar. The ob-
- it is a
ject of this concept is not yet an actual being merely possible
being. Obviously then, nothing which God weakly includes in His
concept of Caesar insures that the object of that concept actually ex-
ists. God can even weakly include existence in that concept and Caesar
will still be a merely possible being. So existence cannot, in the strong
sense, be in God's concept. But "being white" can. For suppose God
conceives Caesar to be white. Then something which is weakly includ-
ed in God's concept, namely the predicate "being white," insures that
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Kant and "Is Existence a Predicate?"
11 Of course one might try to argue that: (a) it is possible to have a concept of N
such that every predicate N would have were it to exist is weakly and non-
vacuously included in that concept; (b) existence cannot be weakly and non-
vacuously included in any concept; (c) therefore, if N exists, existence is not one
of its predicates. Leaving aside the question of how (a) might be defended, I can-
not find this kind of argument in Kant.
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What about (P2), the claim that "being white" can, but existence
cannot, belong to an object of a concept when that object is a merely
possible being? Again, this claim will appear plausible only if we con-
fuse intentional and extensional claims about the object of a concept.
If, prior to creation, God has a concept of Caesar, then the object of
God's concept, namely Caesar, is a merely possible being. (P2) says that
this merely possible being can have the predicate "being white," but
cannot have existence. Now it is trivially true that if the object of God's
concept is a merely possible being the extensional claim 'Caesar exists'
is false. But then, a fortiori, the extensional claim 'Caesar is white' is
also false. So if we are speaking extensionally, the merely possible ob-
ject of God's concept neither exists nor is white. On the other hand, if
we speak intentionally, there seems no problem in allowing that the
object of God's concept can both exist and be white. For since "being
white" and existence can be weakly included in God's concept of
Caesar, the intentional claims 'Caesar is white' and 'Caesar exists'
could both be true. Since I am unable to see any univocal way in which
"being white" can, while existence cannot, belong to the merely
possible object of a concept, it seems to me that (P2) is false and argu-
ment B therefore unsuccessful.
Summary of sections I and II. Kant's arguments that existence is not
a predicate are grounded in the Doctrine of Isomorphism. Those
arguments will be successful only if existence differs from "being
white" in one of the ways claimed in (P1), (P2), or (P3). But if we
are careful to distinguish intentional and extensional claims about the
object of a concept, we will see that (P1), (P2) and (P3) are false. It
would appear, then, that even if the Doctrine of Isomorphism is
sound, the attempt to use that doctrine to show that existence is not a
predicate is misguided.
Ill
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Kant and "Is Existence a Predicate?"
In the first of these passages Kant is claiming that when we say 'God is
an existing thing' or just 'God exists', the grammatical structure of the
sentences we utter makes it look as though we are ascribing the
predicate, "being an existing thing/' or the predicate of existence, to
God. But this, he claims, is not correct. What we are actually doing is
ascribing the predicate, "belonging to an existing thing," to the
predicates of divinity; we are saying, that is, not that God has a
predicate of existence, but that the predicates of onmipotence, on-
miscience, etc., belong to an existing thing. In short, we are not ascrib-
ing a first-level predicate to God, but rather ascribing the second-level
predicate, "belonging to an existing thing," to some predicates.
This general theme is repeated in the second of the two passages
just quoted. Thus with his hexagon example Kant seems to be making
the claim that when we say "regular hexagons exist in nature" or just
"regular hexagons exist," we are not ascribing a predicate of ex-
istence, or the predicate "existing in nature" to hexagons, but instead
are ascribing a second-level predicate to those predicates weakly in-
cluded in our concept of a hexagon. We are saying that those
predicates "belong to certain things in nature." With the sea-unicorn
example Kant appears to be making a slightly different claim. When
we say "sea-unicorns exist" we are not ascribing a predicate of ex-
istence to sea-unicorns, but are instead ascribing the second-level
predicate, "being a concept of experience," or "being a concept
which applies to an existing thing," to the concept of a sea-unicorn.
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12 See Gottlob Frege, The Foundations of Arithmetic (New York, 1960), pp. 64-65.
For a discussion of Frege's argument see my "Frege's Objection to the On-
tological Argument/' Nous, vol. VI (1972), pp. 251-265.
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Kant and "/s Existence a Predicate?"
Kant evidently means here to claim that the concept of existence can-
not be added to the concept of a thing. Yet in supporting this claim,
Kant goes on to make remarks which it is perhaps not altogether im-
plausible to regard as variations of his now familiar theme that when
we say that something exists we are saying of certain predicates that
they belong to some existing thing (i.e., we are ascribing a second-
level predicate to some predicates):
It is merely the positing of a thing, or of certain determinations, as existing in
themselves. ... If, now, we take the subject (God) with all its predicates (among
which is omnipotence) and say "God is," or "there is a God," we only posit the sub-
ject in itself with all its predicates, and indeed posit it as being an object that stands
in relation to my concept. (B626-627)
Why would Kant support the claim that the concept of existence
cannot be added to the concept of a thing by maintaining that in mak-
ing assertions of existence we are ascribing a second-level predicate to
some predicates? We can perhaps provide a plausible answer to this
question by taking our clue from the passages just cited from
"
Beweisgrund" and suggesting that Kant believed it follows from his
account of what we are doing when making assertions of existence
that existence is a second-level predicate. But if the predicate of ex-
istence is of second-level then the concept of existence is a second-
level concept. Since only first-level concepts can be added to the con-
cept of a thing, the concept of existence cannot be added to the con-
cept of a thing.13
I have been suggesting that Kant holds both the following claims:
And I have been suggesting further that Kant appears to take (a) as sup-
porting (b). Now perhaps much of the incentive to hold (a) will be
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(1) when we assert 'Xs exist' (or N exists) we ascribe to the concept
of an X (or of N), or to the predicates which are included in that
concept, the second-level predicate "being a concept of ex-
perience/' or "belonging to an existing thing."
Now I know of no reason to suppose that (1) and (2) are inconsistent. If
they are not, Kant has not shown that existence is a second-level
predicate. One can agree with Kant's claim about what we are doing
when we make existence assertions and still maintain that existence is
a first-level predicate.
January 1975
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