A willow tree is simply similar to another one in how their matter is organized. — Gregory
12. Y de esto se sigue, primer lugar, que aunque cada individuo sea la realidad formalmente uno, sin intervención de la consideración de la mente, sin embargo, muchos individuos de quienes afirmamos ser de la misma naturaleza, no son algo uno con verdadera unidad que exista en las cosas, a no ser sólo fundamentalmente o mediante el entendimiento. [...] Segundo, se deduce que una cosa es hablar de unidad formal y otra de la "comunidad" de dicha unidad; porque la unidad se da en las cosas, según se explicó; en cambio, la "comunidad" propia y estrictamente no se da en las cosas, porque ninguna unidad que exista en la realidad es común, según demostramos, sino que en las cosas singulares hay cierta semejanza en sus unidades formales, en la cual se funda la comunidad que el entendimiento puede atribuir a tal naturaleza en cuanto concebida por él, y esta semejanza no es propiamente unidad, porque no expresa la indivisión de las entidades en que se funda, sino solo la conveniencia o relación, o la coexistencia de ambas.
The fact that two chairs can be different seems to me to say that the "realist" position is wrong. — Gregory
Then there is the opposite attack on thought: that urged by Mr. H.G.Wells when he insists that every separate thing is "unique," and there are no categories at all. This also is merely destructive. Thinking means connecting things, and stops if they cannot be connected. It need hardly be said that this scepticism forbidding thought necessarily forbids speech; a man cannot open his mouth without contradicting it. Thus when Mr. Wells says (as he did somewhere), "All chairs are quite different," he utters not merely a misstatement, but a contradiction in terms. If all chairs were quite different, you could not call them "all chairs."
Then there is the opposite attack on thought: that urged by Mr. H.G.Wells when he insists that every separate thing is "unique," and there are no categories at all. This also is merely destructive. Thinking means connecting things, and stops if they cannot be connected. It need hardly be said that this scepticism forbidding thought necessarily forbids speech; a man cannot open his mouth without contradicting it. Thus when Mr. Wells says (as he did somewhere), "All chairs are quite different," he utters not merely a misstatement, but a contradiction in terms. If all chairs were quite different, you could not call them "all chairs."
Some people posit that the are only a few universals, e.g. various flavors of quark, lepton, etc. — Count Timothy von Icarus
From my pov, nominalism is nothing other than the Cartesian doctrine that matter is extension. — Gregory
There is no one substance, like matter, but an unfathomable many substances, individuated by their location in space and time. — NOS4A2
It sounds like nominalism drowns in contingecies (and infinity?) But numbers in general do this. 1 can be divided unlessly so that there is no base unit — Gregory
But this makes analytics impossible, since it implies that a local material change to reality causes the meaning and hence definitions of the rest of reality to change. — sime
In any case, if the difference between things depends (solely) on the relationships between them (e.g. position in space-time) then there is no value in considering the things.
It seems to me that the critical component is the relationships that differentiate.
I agree that relative position (relationships) individuate. Given this, individual substances have no intrinsic properties, essence or identity. In this light the distinction between one substance and many substances is moot.
The only thing of relevance to discuss is the relationships (position) that gives rise to the distinct perceptions.
I don't know the history of nominalism very well, so maybe somebody can illuminate this question with some quotes from the past — Gregory
The thing is everything, without which there would be no relationship or any other contrived measurement. — NOS4A2
The quoted argument assumes that all words are universals — Ourora Aureis
an arbitrary definition for it — Ourora Aureis
If you can make up a definition for it, is it arbitrary? Does it not exist in relation to other words, which refer to things in the world? — Lionino
Thomism is all together too in the middle, too ordinary, too boring to possibly be true in any real sense of the word. — Gregory
The quoted argument assumes that all words are universals, which is a ludicrous idea.
Presumably it has something to do with them since you're able to refer to them with words right here.Language has nothing to do with univerals.
There is no truth in language; anyone can make a word and an arbitrary definition for it.
But you (and everyone else) cannot describe a thing in the absence of relationships.
for all X
{
X=not(Everything else)
}
The intrinsic properties, essence or identity of X are irrelevant. X is not what it is - X is its relationships with everything else (what it is not).
With this in mind - I fail to see how a thing is anything, let alone everything.
For Aristotle, the universals only exist where they are instantiated, e.g. in triangular things. — Count Timothy von Icarus
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