• How to be a powers theorist about functional laws, conservation laws and symmetries
    Samuel Kimpton-Nye
    Philosophical Studies 180 (1): 317-332. 2022.
    This paper defends an account of the laws of nature in terms of irreducibly modal properties (aka powers) from the threat posed by functional laws, conservation laws and symmetries. It thus shows how powers theorists can avoid ad hoc explanations and resist an inflated ontology of powers and governing laws. The key is to understand laws not as flowing from the essences of powers, as per Bird (2007), but as features of a description of how powers are possibly distributed, as per Demarest (2017), …Read more
  • Dispositions and Powers
    Cambridge University Press. 2023.
    As we understand them, dispositions are relatively uncontroversial 'predicatory' properties had by objects disposed in certain ways. By contrast, powers are hypothetical 'ontic' properties posited in order to explain dispositional behaviour. Chapter 1 outlines this distinction in more detail. Chapter 2 offers a summary of the issues surrounding analysis of dispositions and various strategies in contemporary literature to address them, including one of our own. Chapter 3 describes some of the imp…Read more
  • Common Ground for Laws and Metaphysical Modality
    Dissertation, King's College London. 2018.
  • The Nature of Contingency: Quantum Physics as Modal Realism (review)
    Philosophical Quarterly 71 (2): 444-447. 2021.
    The Nature of Contingency: Quantum Physics as Modal Realism. By Wilson Alastair.
  • Some philosophers maintain that physical properties are irreducibly modal: that properties are powers. Powers are then employed to provide explanations of other phenomena of philosophical interest such as laws of nature and modality. There is, however, a dispute among powers theorists about how far the powers ontology extends: are all manner of properties at all levels of fundamentality powers or are powers only to be found among the fundamental properties? This paper argues that the answer to t…Read more
  • Laws of Nature: Necessary and Contingent
    Philosophical Quarterly 72 (4): 875-895. 2022.
    This paper shows how a niche account of the metaphysics of laws of nature and physical properties—the Powers-BSA—can underpin both a sense in which the laws are metaphysically necessary and a sense in which it is true that the laws could have been different. The ability to reconcile entrenched disagreement should count in favour of a philosophical theory, so this paper constitutes a novel argument for the Powers-BSA by showing how it can reconcile disagreement about the laws’ modal status. This …Read more
  • Reconsidering the Dispositional Essentialist Canon
    Philosophical Studies 178 (10): 3421-3441. 2021.
    Dispositional Essentialism is a unified anti-Humean account of the metaphysics of low-level physical properties and laws of nature. In this paper, I articulate the view that I label Canonical Dispositional Essentialism, which comprises a structuralist metaphysics of properties and an account of laws as relations in the property structure. I then present an alternative anti-Humean account of properties and laws. This account rejects CDE’s structuralist metaphysics of properties in favour of a vie…Read more