Philosophers have given various distinct definitions to the words essence (quidditas) and substance (oὐσία).
However, when speaking about essence, they usually mean something among the lines of: a general attribute or quality. The quidditas or essence, as opposed to the existence, of a thing. The real individual peculiarity or haecceity of something, which goes beyond general concepts. Being in itself, as opposed to mere being and appearance. The core, as opposed to the shell. The internal, as opposed to the external. The necessarily defining, as opposed to the accidental and random. Sometimes, it is true, they mean merely the general, as opposed to the particular.
Further, Rudolf Carnap pointed out that the answer to a question of the form “What is X?” or “what is characteristic of X?” (“What is woman?” “What is democracy?” “What’s the corona virus?”) is often one to which the expected answer is an essentialist one, or one which employs the notion of essence.
Such an approach very often carries with it the ontological assumption that in regards to the question “What is X?”, there is always a “something” (whether material or immaterial, ideal or real) which is what is characteristic, defining or essential of X. The rest of X is, according to this assumption, merely incidental, contingent and apparent. The doctrine presupposed by this way of asking questions is thus essentialism.
Essentialism essentially maintains that in individual entities such as chairs, tables or bottles there are certain essential, universal qualities which give them their particularity or haecceity. For example: all swans are white, but only in so far as they all partake of a common whiteness, which constitutes the essence of white swans.
It should be kept in mind, however, that essentialism is a false doctrine. The reason for this is quite simple: there are no essences, there is no oὐσία. Although we humans wish that there be characteristic, permanent and unique things behind such terms as “law”, “justice”, “freedom”, “equality”, “state”, “humanity”, “society”, “rationality”, etc., in truth behind such words there’s only... words, which are no more than the common agreement between us humans, a social convention. Nominalism, rather than essentialism, is therefore to be preferred.
There is no essence, no substance, no core. Everything is appearance.
(...) And from the fact that we need an order, it does not follow that there is none, even if Nietzsche is right in pointing out that arguments for the beliefs which conform to our wishes ought to be prima facie treated with suspicion. We may need an order and wish it to be real but it still may be real, not just a concoction of our wishful thinking. — Leszek Kolakowski, Horror Metaphysicus
But it seems to me that this is a non-sequitur: it does not follow from the fact that we wish something to be the case, that it is not the case — Amalac
I don't think he is making an argument there at all, he seem to be just stating what he thinks is the case, and why we tend to believe in essences... i.e. because we wish it. — ChatteringMonkey
Yes, and it cuts both ways, wishing doesn't have a necessary relation with truth either way... there are just putting the emphasis on the other way (because that is where the tradition they are criticizing was coming from I guess). — ChatteringMonkey
Various definitions (of religion) are therefore acceptable; However, those that imply that religion "is nothing more than" an instrument of secular, social or psychological needs are not acceptable(for example, that its meaning is reducible to its function in social integration); they are empirical statements (false, I believe) and can be rejected beforehand as parts of a definition.
One does see this sort of argument often in philosophy of religion as well for example, some philosophers seem to claim that there is no afterlife, or that religious text are just fairy tales, and then go on to say that we only believe in those things because we don't want to die (among other things), but that does not prove (as they sometimes seem to imply) that there is no afterlife or that religious texts are just fairy tales. — Amalac
The affirmative assumes logic psychologism — 180 Proof
It's possible that Ludwig Wittgenstein's claim that words lack an essence is a sign of sorts that the OP is on the right track. — AgentSmith
This is one of the criteria of essence. It's the properties without which a thing could not be the thing that it is. — Cuthbert
The "essence" of a thing appears to have meant "those of its properties which it cannot change without losing its identity." Socrates may be sometimes happy, sometimes sad; sometimes well, sometimes ill. Since he can change these properties without ceasing to be Socrates, they are no part of his essence.
But it is supposed to be of the essence of Socrates that he is a man, though a Pythagorean, who believes in transmigration, will not admit this. In fact, the question of "essence" is one as to the use of words. We apply the same name, on different occasions, to somewhat different occurrences, which we regard as manifestations of a single "thing" or "person." In fact, however, this is only a verbal convenience.
The "essence" of Socrates thus consists of those properties in the absence of which we should not use the name "Socrates." The question is purely linguistic: a word may have an essence, but a thing cannot. — Russell
Is there a triangle? — AgentSmith
your point being? — Amalac
Nothing that constitutes an essence of a triangle is present in a Kanizsa "triangle". — AgentSmith
The "essence" of Socrates thus consists of those properties in the absence of which we should not use the name "Socrates." The question is purely linguistic: a word may have an essence, but a thing cannot. — Russell
It's curious that although what Russell says about the use of words seems quite in line with Wittgenstein, and yet he concludes that words do have an essence, unlike Wittgenstein. — Alamac
If the essence of "Socrates" is every property in the absence of which something encountered in the universe is not Socrates, then the same criterion can be used to determine correct and incorrect use of the name "Socrates" - and vice-versa - perhaps? — Cuthbert
Socrates might have died aged 2 and it would still have been Socrates the very same person, as Kripke said. — Cuthbert
Depends on what we want to achieve. — Amalac
One thing we want to achieve is preservation of the phenomena. Is the sentence "Socrates wrote The Republic" using the name "Socrates" correctly to refer to Socrates and saying something false about him; or using the name incorrectly by introducing a false description and therefore referring to Plato? Kripke (in those lectures) would say we would tend to say the former. — Cuthbert
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