Note that a strict physicalism of this kind is really saying that all we know in the end is how to make measurements that seem to work (they are reliable, they serve demonstable purpose). So it is an epistemic point, not an ontic claim. — apokrisis
I am talking about the process that produces snowflakes. How can it be singular if it is the same everywhere? How can "a bunch of dust particles floating around in the right atmospheric conditions" occur in more than one place and at more than one time, if this situation is always just a collection of singulars? What enables us to predict the formation of snowflakes before it happens?
Nonphysicalists are those people who reject the doctrine that everything is "physical", whatever that entails precisely. Dualists are not physicalists, nor are idealists or anyone else like that. — darthbarracuda
I can't say I understand what motivation you could have to hold such an extreme reductive view. — darthbarracuda
If properties are physical particulars, then what does is mean that the property of being a physical particular is a physical particular? This seems circular. — darthbarracuda
Yes, but are these different arrangements of matter themselves made of matter? — darthbarracuda
The hard thought to think here is that generality - in this case climactic regularities - are themselves singularities ... — StreetlightX
the shared manner in which they form. — Michael
Why does it sound like philosophers are saying that certain ideas of objects and forms actually have an existence outside of the mind? That just sounds silly, yet I know I am missing something here...
Just to confirm, physicalism and universals are non-compatible right?
So far, I have yet to find a realist who affirms (in so many words) that universals are singularities; just William of Ockham, the arch-nominalist. I suspect that a realist would object to any diagram that does not clearly distinguish a universal from a particular as two distinct kinds of entities. That is the point, really - universals have a different mode of being from particulars. It still seems to me that someone who recognizes only one mode of being - concrete existence - is a nominalist by default. — aletheist
Again, I wasn't saying anything about "kinds of entities." — Terrapin Station
Anyway, why do you think that a realist on universals would say that there is more than one universal of a specific property? — Terrapin Station
Better, I think, to speak in terms of ecologies, environments and contexts, all of which impart a flavour of the singular over and against the abstraction of the general. — StreetlightX
The only logical options, at least if we're realists on universals, is that there is one universal per property or that there are more than one universal per property, right? — Terrapin Station
The intuitive objection a lot of folks have with nominalism is that the properties in Particular Object I and Particular Object II are not actually identical. But the problem with the realism on universals view is obviously that it makes no sense ontologically. Realism on universals is simply a reification of concepts and the normal way that language works. — Terrapin Station
It is hard for me to think this because it is contradictory, at least as I currently understand the two terms. That which is general - including all processes and regularities - cannot be singular, and vice-versa. If everything is truly singular, then nothing is truly general. — aletheist
I think the issue is that we say that the manner in which the snow was formed here is the same manner in which the snow was formed there. So there's something that two particular singulars have in common; this thing in common not itself being a particular singular.
Else when snow forms in two different places we have three particular singulars; the snow forming here, the snow forming there, and the shared manner in which they form. — Michael
No. This just repeats the metaphysical mistake of encountering a dichotomy and trying to turn it into a monism where one pole of being is primary or foundational, the other somehow illusory or emergent.
So sure, existence might be singular in the sense that substantial being is always the hylomorphic outcome of some developmental history. But every snowflake is still the unique outcome of a common process. The geomorphic world has a general habit of producing particular snowflakes. So the general part of the story is as fundamental as the particularity.
I would agree that the usual conception of Universals is faulty because it does express the monistic fallacy. It wants to treat the general as the foundation of being - as in Plato's ideas. But it is just as much a mistake to turn around and argue some variety of nominalism. — apokrisis
Okay, but I have not been able to find anyone else who puts it that way. — aletheist
I thnk the objection to nominalism is much deeper than that. This is because the similarities, likenesses and common attributes shared by like things, are more than arbitrary, but are real, and are not simply real in the mind or in language. — Wayfarer
... generality is opposed to particularity, and not singularity ... Singularity (and it's natural 'pairing', universality, which is in turn not generality) cuts across the general-particular dichotomy, such that a general regime may itself be particular. — StreetlightX
Nominalists are not denying the reality of similarities or resemblances. They're denying the reality of multiple things having an identical (in the A=A sense) property. — Terrapin Station
otherwise it will be ignored (because for whatever reason, that's how you interact with me) — Terrapin Station
There's one universal for "spherical." And the whole gist of universals is then that particular substances that are spheres exihibit the universal "spherical." — Terrapin Station
An ecology, environment, or even cosmos is precisely - a singular generality - a short-circuit between the poles that is precisely designed to avoid collapsing one into the other. — StreetlightX
That said, I realize that you're irrevocably wedded to your vocabulary, which in the end' works' much in the same fashion, but I'd rather avoid it all the same. — StreetlightX
It remains too musty for my liking, even when dusted off and treated anew (even 'hylomorphism' leaves a bad taste in the mouth...). — StreetlightX
For Aristotle, the distinction between singular and universal is a fundamental metaphysical one, and not merely grammatical.
A singular term for Aristotle is primary substance, which can only be predicated of itself: (this) "Callias" or (this) "Socrates" are not predicable of any other thing...He contrasts universal (katholou)[4] secondary substance, genera, with primary substance, particular (kath' hekaston)[4][5] specimens.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Term_logic#Singular_terms
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