Recent years have seen a fl ourishing of what has been called ‘the metaphysics
of science’. In part this is the result of certain challenges to metaphysics
as currently practised, which have focused on its apparent lack of
engagement with modern science. A quick scan of the relevant literature
will reveal numerous works on monism, dispositions, metaphysical ‘simples’,
gunk and other such exotica but which either deploy caricature-like
examples from physics, say, or make no contact with current scientifi c
developments whatsoever. When so challenged, metaphysicians will typically
respond that they are more concerned with charting the vast seas
of the possible than with accommodating the mundane features of the
actual world, but that raises the obvious question: if their metaphysics of
the actual fails to make contact with modern science, why should we pay
attention to their claims about the possible?!