“Ontology” is firmly dedicated to “exist or doesn’t exist”. Metaphysics is more broadly “what’s the world like?” and includes ontology as a central subfield.
Whether there is free will is a metaphysical question, but not, I think, an ontological one (at least not necessarily). “Free will” is not a thing or a category or a property, it’s a claim that in some broad aspects the world is like this and not like that.
Whether such things as desires or intentions exist or are made-up fictions is an ontological question.
Thanks! I’ve seen many times the statement that ontology is strictly included in metaphysics, but this is the first time I’ve seen an example of something that’s in the set-theoretic difference.
“Ontology” is firmly dedicated to “exist or doesn’t exist”. Metaphysics is more broadly “what’s the world like?” and includes ontology as a central subfield.
Whether there is free will is a metaphysical question, but not, I think, an ontological one (at least not necessarily). “Free will” is not a thing or a category or a property, it’s a claim that in some broad aspects the world is like this and not like that.
Whether such things as desires or intentions exist or are made-up fictions is an ontological question.
Thanks! I’ve seen many times the statement that ontology is strictly included in metaphysics, but this is the first time I’ve seen an example of something that’s in the set-theoretic difference.