Thought: A Journal of Philosophy

Volume 7, Issue 2, June 2018

Jon Erling Litland
Pages 97-108

In Defense of the (Moderate) Disunity of Grounding

Fine (2012) is a pluralist about grounding. He holds that there are three fundamentally distinct notions of grounding: metaphysical, normative, and natural. Berker (2017) argues for monism on the grounds that the pluralist cannot account for certain principles describing how the distinct notions of grounding interact. This paper defends pluralism. By building on work by Fine (2010) and Litland (2015) I show how the pluralist can systematically account for Berker’s interaction principles.