Abstract
Russell once said that “Vagueness and precision alike are characteristics which
can only belong to a representation, of which language is an example. They have
to do with the relation between a representation and that which it represents.
Apart from representation, whether cognitive or mechanical, there can be no such
thing as vagueness or precision; things are what they are, and there is an end
of it” (1923). In other words, expressions like ontological vagueness (and even
ontological precision) are category mistakes and therefore make no sense. Half a
century later, as the view began to emerge that some vagueness could be intelligibly
ascribed to the world, Dummett opined that “It is not apparently absurd to suppose
... that the physical world is in itself such that the most precise description of
it that even omniscience would yield might yet involve the use of expressions
having some degree of vagueness” (1981). Evans had already questioned the idea of
worldly vagueness, arguing that it was inconsistent (1978). A quarter of a century
later, however, many papers had been written in defense of the intelligibility and
possibility of this once nonsense and then contradictory claim. This chapter is one
of them, albeit from a different viewpoint.
The aim of this chapter is twofold: firstly, to consider the intelligibility of
vague ontology, and secondly, to discuss the most famous argument against
vague ontology, i.e., Evans’ argument. To this end, in Sect. 11.2 we present some
commonsensical considerations on vague ontology. In Sect. 11.3, we look at some
supervaluationist theories and the kind of vague ontology they accommodate before
arguing that this kind of ontology is inconsistent with commonsense. Section 11.4
outlines a version of supervaluationism that can accommodate the commonsensical
considerations discussed in Sect. 11.2. The outlined view is an ontological variation
of Kit Fine’s characterization of vagueness as incompleteness (1975). It will be
argued that the view is more effective than other versions of supervaluationism at
accommodating commonsensical and metaphysical considerations. In the following
section, we consider vague identity. Based on the view outlined in Sect. 11.4, there
may be vague identity in some special cases. In Sect. 11.6 we focus on Evans’
argument and argue that it can be blocked in the first step.