what is the ontological status of institutions?" — Matias
People who claim to do so are deluded. — Matias
Canada is the type of thing that can exist by virtue of it being agreed to exist. As can 'marriage', 'the office of the president' etc. It's ontological status is that of a social fact. God is posited as having an existence independent of both society and human beings. 'His' ontological status is therefore more fundamental, metaphysically. So, the question is misframed. A God that exists only by virtue of agreement (as a social fact) is not a God at all (is in fact only the atheist conception of God), but a Canada that exists only by virtue of agreement is fully the Canada we know. — Baden
If you exist then your existence is both qualitative and quantitative. If He's this, He's not that. He's here and not there, for examples. And there is a long list of binary considerations that whichever applies the other doesn't.
What do you mean Canada? The surface of earth and things in it controlled by the Canadian government? The people of Canada? The government of Canada? — Frotunes
Everything that is so to speak tagged with the idea "Canada". — Matias
But notably, I can visit Canada. I can put my feet on Canadian soil. — S
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