The problem of the futures contingents designs a logical paradox first posed by Diodorus Cronus from the Megarian school of philosophy, under the name of the "dominator", and then reactualized by Aristotle in chapter 9 of De Interpretatione. It was latter taken on by Leibniz. It concerns the contingency of a future event. Deleuze used it to oppose a "logic of the event" to a "logic of signification". Diodorus' problem concerned the question: "will there be a battle tomorrow?" According to this question, two propositions are possible: yes, "there will there be a sea battle tomorrow" or no, "there will not be a sea battle tomorrow." This was a paradox in Diodorus' eyes, since either there would be a battle tomorrow or there wouldn't be one: according to the basic law of excluded middle (A is either true or false), one of the two proposition had to be right and therefore excluded the other. But this poses a problem, since the judgment on the proposition (whether it is right or wrong) can only be made when the event happenned. In Deleuze's words, "time is the crisis of truth". This problem thus concerns the ontological statute of the future, and therefore of human action: is our future determined or not? The future, putting in stakes the category of possibility, here poses problem to logics which are accorded to the present time.
According to the law of excluded middle, something concerning reality is either true or false (A is B or A is not B). Logics is thus based on disjunctive syllogism. But this poses a problem when logics is applied to future possibilities instead of present reality. Diodorus' famous proposition is "will there be a sea battle tomorrow" and "will there not be a sea battle tomorrow?" This problems concerns the ontological statute of the future, and therefore of human action: is future determined or not? Logical necessity seems to be defeated by real necessity.
One can either say that the proposition is neither true nor false: some possible futures make it true and others wrong; this may be called "indeterminacy intuition". Or one can says that the truth-value of the proposition will be only given in the future, that is until the future unfolds. Thus, it is always will be given but never presently given.
Aristotle solved the problem by asserting that the law of excluded middle found its exception in this paradox of the sea battles: in this specific case, what is impossible is that both alternatives can be possible at the same time: either there will be a battle, or there won't. Both options can't be simultaneously taken. Today, they are neither true nor false; but if one is true, then the other becomes false. According to Aristotle, it is impossible to say today if the proposition is correct: we must wait for the contingent realization (or not) of the battle, logics realizes itself afterwards:
For Diodorus, the future battle was either impossible or necessary. Aristotle added a third term, contingency, which saves logics while in the same time leaving place for indetermination in reality. What is necessary is not that there will or that there won't be a battle tomorrow, but the alternative itself is necessary:
Thus, the event always come in the form of the future, indetermined event; logics always come afterwards. Hegel would says the same thing by claiming that wisdom came at the dusk. For Aristotle, this is as well a practical, ethical question: to pretend that future is determined would have unacceptable consequences on man.
Leibniz gave another response to the paradox in §6 of Discourse on Metaphysics: "That God does nothing which is not orderly, and that it is not even possible to conceive of events which are not regular." Thus, even a miracle, the Event by excellence, does not break the regular order of things. What is seen as irregular is only a default of perspective, but does not appears so in relation to universal order. Possible exceeds human logics. Leibniz encounters this paradox because according to him:
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"Problem of the futures contingents".
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