Title: Part I: The Problem of Universals
1Part I The Problem of Universals
2Types or Categories of Entities
Entities
Universals (Attributes)
Particulars (Things)
Kinds
Relations (Diadic, triadic, polyadic
predicates, to the right of, between,
equidis- tant from etc.)
Properties (monadic predicates like
colour, shape, cha- racter traits )
Biological species (dog, cat, rose, human, or any
specific life form or unified way of being
or basic physical kinds (elements like earth,
water, fire, air)
Genera (animal, plant, ele- ment)
3The Phenomena to be Explained
- (1) Attribute Agreement
- Many individual items agree in being (a) yellow,
triangular, courageous, etc. (b) in being
geraniums, oak trees, human beings, etc. (c) in
being the parent of, being between, being
equidistant from, etc., i.e. different things
agree in possessing (a) the same property or (b)
belonging to the same kind, and different pairs,
triples, n-tuples of objects agree in relation. - (2) Abstract Reference
- Our language abounds in propositions that employ
abstract terms like courage, wisdom,
triangularity, circularity that appear to
refer to, i.e. be proper names for, universals.
The problem is understanding whether we must
posit the existence of universals in order to
understand how these propositions can be true. - (3) The Truth of Subject-Predicate Sentences
- The truth of sentences like Socrates is wise
seems to involve some sort of correspondence
between the sentence and the items that it is
about. The question is whether the existence of
the particular entity referred to by the subject
term is enough, OR whether the existence of the
multiply exemplifiable entity referred to by the
predicate term must likewise be posited, so that
the truth of the proposition consists in the two
entities being related to each other in the
manner asserted in the proposition.
4The Modes of Explanation
- (1) Two-category, realist theories
- A satisfactory explanation of attribute
agreement, abstract reference, and the truth of
subject-predicate propositions requires us to
posit two separate categories of entities,
universals (multiply exemplifiable, repeatable or
recurrent entities) as well as particulars
(entities that occur in one unique place and
time) - (2) One-category, nominalist theories
- A satisfactory explanation of attribute
agreement, abstract reference, and the truth of
subject-predicate propositions can be given in
terms of particulars alone, OR no explanation is
required in that the phenomena in question are
irreducibly basic phenomena that we cannot get
under.
5Three Senses of Metaphysical Realism
- Realism is opposed to (1) idealism, (2)
nominalism, and, more recently, to (3)
anti-realism. - (1) realism is the view that material objects or
external realities exist (and are what they are)
apart from (or independently of) our knowledge or
consciousness of them. Its opposite, idealism, is
the view that being is dependent of the knowing
of it (cf. Hirst, Encycl. of Philosophy) - (2) realism is the view that there are, in
addition to the familiar concrete particulars of
everyday experience, universal entities that are
capable of being instantiated in many
particulars. Some realists hold that universal
exist only in the things that instantiate them
(Aristotle), others that they can also exist in
their own right or uninstantiated (Plato).
Nominalism denies of the existence of any but
particular, individual entities. - (3) realism is the view that there are truths for
which there is no evidence and propositions
backed by evidence which are not true
anti-realism holds that there is a close tie
between truth and evidence such that (a) nothing
is ever true unless there is evidence for it and
(b) nothing could be backed by a certain kind of
evidence without being true.
6Varieties of Realism in sense (2)
- What sort of universals are there?
- (1) Universalia ante res (Platonistic universals
existing independently of particular things) cf.
Russell - There is a different universal for every
distinct meaning or use of a predicate term or
abstract universal, whether or not those
universals are instantiated in space and time. - (2) Universalia in rebus (Aristotelian
universals existing only as instantiated in
particular things) - (a) There are universals only for basic or
simple predicates or abstract terms there are
not additional universals for each composite or
compound predicate or abstract term to refer to. - (b) There are universals only for those
properties, kinds, and relations that our best
scientific theories posit as real (e.g. muons,
phuons, quarks. What universals there are is an
empirical matter for scientists to decide. cf.
Armstrong
7Varieties of Nominalism (Particularist
Ontologies)
- (1) Austere Nominalism (cf. Price, Quine) there
exist only concrete individuals like the familiar
particular living and non-living material
objects. -
- This is all we need to account for (i) attribute
agreement (a brute fact that cannot be explained
by anything more basic), (ii) the truth of
subject-predicate propositions (explained by
certain facts about concrete individuals and
their relations) and (iii) abstract reference
(only apparently a reference to universals,
really a special device for talking about many
concrete particulars at the same time, i.e. about
all the individuals possessing a certain concrete
or abstract, monadic or polyadic attribute) - (2) Trope Theory (cf. Williams) in addition to
concrete individual things there are also
concrete individual attributes or properties
(like colours, shapes, and character traits) that
resemble each other (trope similarity is a brute
metaphysical fact that cannot be explained in
terms of anything more basic). - This gives a better account of (i) attribute
agreement (each individual possesses its own
trope and all the tropes resemble each other),
(ii) subject-predicate propositions (the
individual designated by the subject possesses
one of the resembling tropes correlated with the
predicate term, and (iii) abstract reference
(abstract general terms pick out a set or class
of resembling tropes, e.g. reds, courages,
etc. )
8Bertrand Russell, The World of Universals
- 1.Introduction of the problem there are (in
addition to physical things, mental things, and
sense data) relations - 2.Exposition of Platos theory of Forms, and
replacement of the term Form by Universal - 3.The logical origins of the problem of
universals any meaningful sentence must include
at least one universal, be it a common noun, an
adjective, a preposition (denoting a relation),
or a verb. - 4. The consequences of ignoring relations
(prepositions) (a) monism of Spinoza and
monadism of Leibniz, (b) Berkeleys and Humes
failure to see the obvious refutation of their
rejection of abstract general ideas. - 5.Relations do not have mental existence (not
ideal in the manner of mental acts) - 6.Relations have being or subsistence, while
mental things (including sense-data) and physical
things have existence.
9H.H. Price Universals and ResemblanceNote
numbers correspond to unnumbered sections key
distinctions are highlighted
- 1. Qualities, relations (including internal
relations or structure) are universals Platonic
and Aristotelian theories of universals - 2.Misleading features of the (Aristotelian)
Philosophy of Universals (PU) and remedy
recurrent characteristics instead of
universals - 3. First difficulty for PU it cannot account for
degrees of resemblance (and of instantiation of
concepts). Objection employs the intensity-extent
and exactinexact distinctions. - 4. (a) First classical objection to the competing
Philosophy of Resemblances (PR) and (b) reply to
it using the in respect of towards
distinction - 5. (a) Second classical objection to the PR (
Russells refutation of Berkeley and Hume) and
(b) four replies to it - 6. Reply to objection against PU in 3. above (see
determinabledeterminate distinction) - 7. Conclusion neither PU nor PR has been
refuted both have their strengths and defects
10Analysis of Price, 5 (see p. 36)
- O(bjection) to PR Surely resemblance itself is
a universal, present in many pairs or groups of
resemblant objects? It is, of course, a relation
In their attempt to get rid of universals, the
Philosophers of Resemblance seem to concentrate
their attention on universals of quality and say
nothing about universals of relation. (Sounds
exactly like Russell) - R(eply) 1 the objection begs the question by
assuming that in using general words like
resemblance we commit ourselves to the
existence of general things (here the universal
Resemblance), when thats the very thing to be
proved. - R2 In declaring resemblance itself to be a
universal, the objection overlooks the difference
between (a) the many first-order resemblances
(qualities and relations) and (b) the
second-order resemblance among these resemblances
that explains them all. In other words, having
begged the question by assuming the things under
(a) to be universals, it goes on to make the same
assumption about (b), thus overlooking an
important difference. (Note first-orderhigher-or
der distinction) - R3 In taking resemblance to be a relation (like
others), the objection overlooks the fact that
resemblance is (for the PR) more fundamental than
any relation, not itself a relation, because it
explains all relations. - R4 The objection that resemblance is a relation
like other relations (and that in admitting it we
admit a universal) leads to contradiction since,
in the PU itself, resemblance is either not a
relation at all, or a relation of a very special
sort
11Quine, On What There Is
- 1. Platos beard (or the riddle of non-being
what is not must be since otherwise it would be
meaningless to say that it is not) and the
difficulties into which it leads anyone who
wields Occams razor (takes the negative side in
an ontological dispute) what is alleged not to
exist (in space and time) must still exist
somehow, be it (1) as an actual idea existing
only in the mind (McX) or (2) as an unactualized
possible subsisting eternally outside it (in
Platos heaven?), for which it is hard to give
identity conditions and if (2), the further
consequence that unactualized impossibles
(contradictions) likewise exist can only be
avoided by asserting them to be meaningless, and
this makes a general criterion of meaninglessness
impossible, since there can be no generally
applicable test of contradictoriness (Wyman).
(pp. 425) - 2. Russells theory of definite descriptions as
a means of shaving off Platos beard by
analyzing out particular names like Pegasus
(for which definite descriptions may be
substituted) in the contexts (i.e. sentences) in
which they occur, so that we can say (e.g.)
Pegasus is not without even appearing assert
(self-contradictorily and meaninglessly) that the
thing which is not is. (pp. 457)
12Quine, On What There Is (cont.)
- 3. The gulf between meaning and naming (or
between sense and reference). This rules out the
inference the name x is meaningful (in such
and such a use) therefore it names something, x
therefore some x exists. (pp. 478) - 4. The ontological problem of universals the
ontology of universals admits occult entities
like attributes, relations, classes, numbers,
functions and meanings the ontology of
particulars holds that words and propositions are
significant or meaningful, and that this is an
ultimate and irreducible fact about language that
does not require or admit of explanation in terms
of universals like meanings. (pp. 4850) - 5. Ontological immunity and ontological
commitment To be is to be the value of a bound
variable. (pp. 501) - 6. Parallels between the realist, nominalist, and
conceptualist positions the medieval controversy
about universals and logicist, intuitionist, and
formalist positions in contemporary philosophy of
mathematics (pp. 522) - 7. Reasons for shifting from the ontological to
the semantic plane and reflexion on the
relativity of ontology (pp. 52end)
13Quines Two Chief Lessons
- 1. Regarding singular names and the problem of
Platos beard What seem to be names (e.g.
Pegasus) which, to be meaningful, must refer to
existing individuals are, correctly understood,
incomplete symbols (Russell) the sentences in
which they occur can be translated into others
containing only non-referring expressions, i.e.
(1) individual variables, (2) predicate
variables, and (3) bound variables (of
quantification like something, nothing,
everything). - 2. Regarding the ontological problem of
universals or abstract entities (like
attributes, meanings, species or classes,
numbers, and functions) First, attribute
agreement may taken as an ultimate and
irreducible matter of fact that needs no
explanation by occult entities like universals.
The same applies to meanings we can avoid
committing ourselves to the existence of meanings
as something that that utterances have (or
have in common) by saying instead that the
utterances are significant (meaningful) or
synonymous (and, ideally, by explaining these
words in terms of behaviour). Next, as regards
species, we are ontologically committed to the
existence of anything over which our bound
variables range (until such time as we can show
that our bound variables, like names, are just an
avoidable manner of speaking). Finally, regarding
numbers and other mathematical entities, here
too an extravagantly platonizing philosophy of
mathematics (formalism), and even a moderately
platonizing one (intuitionism) are open to
challenge from one (formalism) that regards
mathematical symbols as no more than useful
conventions involving no ontological commitment.
14Williams, The Elements of Being
- 1. The cardinal problem of ontology substance
(traditionally individual, different, many,
particulars) and attribute (traditionally
universal, same, one) or better - Substances and Universals (note substances or
particulars are really the next topic right now
it is really the question of whether or not
universals exist or not) - 2. The alphabet of being (the elements of
being) - First Proposal regard inexactly similar
properties (colours, shapes, sizes, tastes, etc.)
not as abstract general kinds (universals), but
as themselves constituted by exactly similar, yet
numerically distinct abstract individual parts
and regard these abstract particular parts or
tropes as the ultimate entities, (and therefore
the only true entities) making up both concrete
individual substances (and their concrete parts)
and classes or universals.
15Williams, The Elements of Being (cont.)
- 3.The syllabary of being (ways in which the
elements are combined) -
- Second Proposal there are two and only two ways
in which tropes are combined - 3.1. Location (at the same place at the same
time), to form individuals or particular
substances (concurrence sums of tropes), i.e.
individuals are reducible to these tropes. - 3.2. Similarity, to form universals or
classes as sums of similar tropes or
similarity sets of tropes, i.e. universals can
be eliminated, leaving only similarity sets of
tropes. - 4. Dispelling the mysteries of predication
(subject-predicate propositions) and
existence/essence (existing things and their
natures).
16Re Tropes as Abstract Particulars
- Question
- What are a babys first experiences of?
- Possible answers
- 1. concrete particular things like the ball in
its crib - 2. abstract universals or essences like redness
in general and roundness in general (which it
will later come to conceive as a ball) - 3. abstract particulars or abstract parts
(tropes) of the ball like this particular red (of
this ball here), this particular round(ness of
this ball here) etc. - An example of a trope, then, is a particular red
sense datum, which admittedly has such
distinguishable components as a shape and a size
as well as colour and involves the attributes
of hue, brightness, and saturation still it is
an abstract part in comparison with a whole
coloured solid e.g. a ball (from latter part of
Williams paper, not included in our excerpt). In
general, we can say that tropes are abstract
parts like colour, shape, position, actions
performed, locations of a thing as opposed to its
concrete parts (e.g. top and bottom, right and
left sides, constituent body parts, and so on. - Other names for tropes first accidents (in
medieval terminology), unit properties, cases,
aspects, property tokens, particularized
properties, perfect particulars, abstract
particulars.
17Williams, The Elements of Being (cont.)
- Questions for Discussion
- Q1 Name the circumstance that gives rise to
theories of subsistence and inherence (the fact
about the world to be explained metaphysically). - Q2What might a realist metaphysical explanation
of this circumstance be like? - Q3 W. is here staking out a nominalist or a
realist position? How does his nominalism differ
from Prices? - Q4 Why does W. give his lollipops and their
parts funny names? Whats he trying to get across?
18Williams, The Elements of Being (cont.)
- Q5Whats W.s point about the word same in
(1) Ryan and his brother have the same nose
and (2) Ryan and his brother have the same
father. - Q6 Parse the sentence about Napoleon on p. 60.
Why are the tropes tropes, and the non-tropes
non-tropes? - Q7How does W.s attempt to reduce (actually
eliminate) particular things and universals
(shared properties and relations) from the basic
furniture of the universe work? - Q8 We wouldnt speak of a universal as being a
particular (individual) thing (although Platos
Forms seem to be described this way). What of
particulars that are abstract rather than
concrete?
19Armstrong, Universals as Attributes
- I. The Principle of Instantiation (PI). Arguments
for universalia in rebus (properties) and inter
res (relations), but against uninstantiated,
transcendent, other-worldly universalia ante res
(Platonism) - (a) if not PI, then things have a blob-like
rather than layer-cake structure (?) - (b) onus of proof argument onus on Platonists
- (c) fallaciousness of traditional Argument from
Meaning (or One-Over-Many Argument) - (d) fallaciousness of traditional Falling-Short
Argument (or Argument from Relations) - (e) Tooleys subtler argument (?) inconclusive
- II. Two Arguments against Disjunctive and
Negative Universals - (a) Universals should have something in common
disjunctive and negative universals (like
C-or-M and not-C) may not. - (b) Universal properties are associated with
powers a further disjunct or negation both blurs
identity conditions and adds nothing to power - (c) Note The same argument does not hold
against conjunctive universals
20Armstrong, Universals as Attributes
- III. Family Resemblance. The truth that sometimes
a family resemblance rather than a shared
property underlies a universal predicate does not
imply There are no universals (nominalism),
but only There is not a universal for every
predicate (realism). Family resemblance like
shared properties and common relations must be
explained in terms of universals. Which
universals? Armstrong The manifest or
qualitative image of the world is best accounted
for in terms of the quantitative monadic and
polyadic universals (properties and relations)
posited by physics. - IV. The Truth-maker Principle. More is involved
in the truth of contingent subject-predicate
propositions than just (a) the existence of the
particular subject and (b) that of a predicate
universal, namely (c) the existence of states of
affairs in the world as the ontological ground
(truth-maker) of contingent truths. States of
affairs are required by Class Nominalists and
Resemblance Nominalists (though not by Predicate
Nominalists). States of affairs (if they exist)
have a non-mereological composition since
different states of affairs can have the same
components (unlike the part-whole relation).
21Armstrong, Universals as Attributes
- V. Properties and universals occur only within
states of affairs as their (multiply-instantiated)
constituents No Bare Particulars (understood
as a particular occurring outside states of
affairs, a particular that does not instantiate
any properties or relations). - VI. Solution to the Antinomy of Bare Particulars
(Quilter). Distinguish Thin and Thick,
Particulars. Thin particular that something
(substratum) in an entity which is linked to its
properties by instantiation (yet not either
identical with them or capable of existing
unlinked). Thick particular thin particular
plus all its properties state of affairs.
Intermediate particular thin particular and
some of its properties. - VII. Univerals as Ways to guard against
conceiving univerals as existing uninstantiated
(substantializing them) or particulars existing
without properties/relations think of universals
as ways in which particulars are.
22Armstrong, Universals as Attributes
- VIII. A world consisting of states of affairs
constituted by properties and universals as the
solution to (1) the (Platonic) Multiple Location
Problem - IX. And (2) the problem of higher-order types or
universals, like properties and relations of
properties and relations, which are no longer
needed, except to account for the Laws of Nature
(relations between two properties) and functional
laws. - X. Formal properties of the resemblance relation
(symmetry, transitivity of exact resemblance,
non-transitivity of inexact resemblance), which
are explanatory ultimates on the resemblance
theory of universals, are explained by the
universals theory - XI. The resemblance relation between universals
can be eliminated. - XII. Instantiation as a primitive, inexplicable
explanatory concept - XII. The apparatus of the universals theory
(i) properties and relations, (ii) states of
affairs instantiation as a fundamental tie.
23Varieties of Realism and Nominalism Summary
Realism
Nominalism
Universalia post res after particulars i.e.
added by the mind, which (a) forms universal
concepts or picks out classes (predicate or
conceptual nominalism), or (b) picks out
resemblances (resemblance nominalism)
Universalia in rebus (in particulars) No
uninstantiated universals Aristotelian One-World
Doctrine structured by immanent universals or
forms
Universalia ante res (before particulars)
including uninstantiated universals or
Forms Two-world Doctrine of Transcendent
Universals or Forms (Platonism)
24Part Two The Structure of Particulars
25The Ontological Structure of Particulars
Alternative Theories
A. Reductivist Theories
B. Anti-reductivist Theories
3. Substance Theories (Things are basic entities
capable of ontological analysis but not in terms
of more basic constituents)
1. Bundle Theories (Things are reducible to
bundles of properties)
2. Substratum or Bare Particular
Theories (Things are reducible to bundles of
properties plus a bare substratum)
1.( a) Realist individuals or substances are
bundles of universals or identical properties
co-instantiated with other properties in
different bundles cf. later Russell (BTU)
1. (b) Nominalist or trope-theoretical Individua
l things are bundles of tropes, i.e. uniquely
individual but similar properties cf. Berkeley,
Hume, Ayer, and Williams (BTT)
2. (a) Realist an individual entity includes
something over and above the universal
proper-ties it exemplifies, namely a propertiless
(bare) substratum or bearer cf. Locke, early
Russell, Bergmann, Allaire, Black (BPU)
2. (b) Nominalist or trope-theorist an
individual entity is something over and above
its tropes, namely etc. Cf. Arm-strong (BPT)
3. Aristotelian or quasi-Aristotelian What
possesses the attributes is not a bare
substratum, but the familiar particular or
individual (organic) thing. Natural kind is a
basic attribute, but not a constituent cf.
Aristotelians, Van Cleve (AST)
26The Ontological Structure of Particulars
Alternative Theories Some Abbreviations
- BTU The reductionist bundle theory according to
which properties are universals instantiated in
multiple different particulars (one-category
theory) - BTT The reductionist bundle theory on which
properties are tropes unique to each individual
(one-category theory) - BPT The reductionist theory that posits a
substratum (a bare or property-less
particular) as the bearer of properties, whether
the latter are universals or tropes
(two-category theory) - AST anti-reductionist Aristotelian substance
theories
27The Ontological Structure of Particulars
Alternative Theories Some Abbreviations
- PCI The principle of constituent identity
identity of constituents entails numerical
identity of the constituted whole (axiomatic for
BTU, BTT, and BPT, but irrelevant for AST) - PND The principle of the discernibility of
non-identicals (all non-identicals have some
unshared property) - PII The principle of the identity of
indiscernibles (all indiscernibles things
having all the same attributes are identical) - BBT The bundle-bundle theory according to
which individual things are bundles (series in a
definite relation) of momentary things which are
in turn bundles of properties.
28Reductivist and Anti-reductivist Theories
- Reductivist theories
- take individual entities to be wholes
constituted by more basic entities, such that the
constituent is ontologically prior to (more basic
than) the whole. Thus, it is a shared assumption
of the BTU, the BTT, and the BPT that PCI
(Principle of Constituent Identity numerical
identity of constituents entails numerical
identity of the constituted whole) or (by
contraposition) numerical difference between
constituted entities entails some difference in
their constituents (though not necessarily in
their attributes, unless they have no other
constituents, something substratum theorists
deny). - Anti-reductivist theories
- take complex individual entity of certain kinds
to be absolutely, i.e. irreducibly basic such
that its (universal) accidental properties or
attributes (what it is like) can only be
understood on the basis of its necessary
attributes (what kind or species of entity it is
and the properties that follow therefrom). The
wholeconstituent model and the PCI (both
borrowed from science and inappropriate to
ontological analysis) are rejected in favour of a
natural kindaccident model of structure.
29PDN and PII
- The Principle of the Discernibility of
Non-identicals - Numerically different things must differ in
nature, that is, in respect of at least one
attribute, must have some unshared attribute. - Thus All non-identicals (any two things) must
be discernible (or if different in number, then
somehow different in nature) -
- The Principle of the Identity of Indiscernibles
- If what are putatively two things (call them a
and b) do not differ in any attribute, they are
really one and the same thing designated by two
names, i.e. they differ in name only, but not in
nature and therefore not in number - Thus (by the contraposition of PDN) All
indiscernibles must be identical (i.e., if not
different in nature, then not really different in
number, but only in name). - Or in logical terms Necessarily, for any x, y,
and P, where x and y are any concrete objects and
P is any property, if P is a property of x if and
only if P is a property of y, then x and y are
identical. Or, the same thing in symbols -
- ?(x, y, P)(Px Py) ? x y
30Why does the PII matter?
- The BPT (substratum theorist) argues that since
(i) the BTU entails the PII, and since (ii) the
PII is false, (iii) BTU must be false. - Re (i)
- The BTU combines two theses
- (a) Properties or attributes are universals and
hence identically the same in all the individuals
that jointly instantiate or exemplify them
(realist thesis properties are universals) - (b) Properties or attributes are the only
constituents of individuals, i.e. individuals are
nothing but bundles of universal properties. - Now (a) and (b) together with the Principle of
Constitutent Identity (PCI same
constituents/same entity principle) entail that
two things having all he same attributes are one
and the same thing, or (better) there cannot be
two things having all the same attributes (PII). - If PII is false, then either (a), (b), or the PCI
must be false. But the realist thesis and the PCI
are both clearly true, therefore (b) (and hence
the BTU) must be false.
31Different Versions of the PII
- Weakest (empirical) version (Some unshared
attribute in fact) - As a matter of contingent fact, no two things
have all their properties or attributes in common
(Russell, Casullo) - Standard version (Some unshared attribute
necessarily) - Necessarily, no two things can have all their
properties in common, i.e. it is metaphysically
impossible for there to be diverse yet
indiscernible objects (Leibniz) - Very Strong version (No shared attribute
necessarily) - Necessarily, different things can have no
property in common, i.e. they must differ with
respect to all their properties (Spinoza, for
reasons having to do with his conception of a
thing or substance, A.J. Ayer and Hume, the
latter two being defenders of the BTT)
32Black, The Identity of Indiscernibles
- 1. As First Argument for the PII using being
identical with (or being different from as
a property. - Bs rebuttal trivial. Property must be
interpreted more narrowly to avoid triviality. - 2. As Second Argument for the PII using the
verificationist theory of meaning if the PII is
not true, any number of items could be called
different (e.g. B has ten different hands)
since there need be no discernible difference by
which to confirm or disconfirm that these items
are in fact two, three, etc. But if assertions of
difference are in principle unverifiable, then
they are meaningless (according to a widely
accepted criterion of meaning). Hence to assert
meaningfully that A and B are two, it must be
possible to discern a property that A has and B
lacks (or vice-versa) PII -
33Black, The Identity of Indiscernibles
- 3. Bs counter-example demonstration of the
possibility of (two or more) numerically distinct
yet indiscernible objects (indiscernible
counterparts), or of the falsity of PII and As
constant retort that this is unverifiable and
hence meaningless. - (Note Since the PII can be formulated (see
above) as - ?(x, y, P)(Px Py) ? x y,
-
- this allegedly necessary truth can be refuted by
showing that the following is a possible state of
affairs -
- (x)(y) x ? y (P)(Px Py)
- (To be read as There exist two objects, x and
y, such that x is not identical with y, and for
any property P, P is a property of x if and only
if it is a property of y.) -
-
34Allaire, Bare Particulars
- 1. Aim (114) to Reconcile the Individual-Characte
r Analysis of Subject-Predicate Propositions
(BPU) and the Principle of Acquaintance, a pet
principle of empiricism which states (roughly)
anything posited as a basic entity or referent of
an indefinable term must be immediately given in
experience. - 2. The Dialectics of Sameness and
Difference(115-17) both the nominalist BTT and
realist BTU analyses of two similar but
non-identical red discs face insuperable
objections that do not affect the
Individual-Character Analysis (BPT). For unlike
the BTU and BTT theories, the BPT accounts for
the facts that (a) there is something that is the
same and (2) there is something that is
different. - 3. Dialectics versus Phenomenology (117-8)
- 4. Solution (118 middle-120) Allaires attempt
to show phenomenologically that, unlike the case
of Bergmanns red spot, where it is hard to see
that a bare particular is immediately given,
there is no problem about our just seeing this
(in the manner of direct acquaintance) in the
case of two exactly similar red discs.
35Van Cleve, Three Version of the Bundle Theory
- I. Six Objections to (1) the crude version if
a thing is nothing but a set of properties
(BTU), then (O1) there exists an actual thing for
every actual set of properties (O2) actual
things exist necessarily since properties do
(i.e. must be instantiated) (O3) even sets of
two members must be said to exemplify their
members, i.e. the doubleton redness,
roundness must be red (O4) things cannot change
properties since sets cannot change members (O5)
all properties of a thing are essential to it
(O6) the PII is a necessary truth. But the
consequences in (O4)(O6) are all false. Hence
BTU false.
36Van Cleve, Three Version of the Bundle Theory
- II. The (2) sophisticated version of BTU (a
thing is a set of properties that are
co-instantiated) evades (O1)(O3). Thus, (O1) a
set of properties constitute a thing only if
co-instantiated (O2) any thing is capable of not
existing if its properties, which necessarily
exist, cease to be co-instantiated and (O3)
doubletons need not exemplify their members as
things do, since things do owing to the special
relation of co-instantiation which is more than
membership in a set. But it cannot evade O4O6
(despite the efforts of Loux and others to show
that it can).
37Van Cleve, Three Version of the Bundle Theory
- III. The new bundle theory that avoids the
objections (O4)(O6) is modelled on the new
phenomenalism it does not populate the world
with individual that are O4 incapable of
change, O5 devoid of accidental properties, and
O6 qualitatively unique because it does not
populate the world with individuals at all, but
eliminates individuals in favour of properties
that are co-instantiated at one or more places in
space. - IV. Although Ayer has come close, no one has ever
held this theory which, by eliminating physical
things altogether, would also eliminate any human
being that holds it. Thus, all three versions
fail. The alternative is a theory involving
substance (though not as a bare particular).
38Questions for Discussion
- Q1 Speaking of the BTUs appeal to impure
properties like being self-identical in defence
of the PII, VC says (on p. 122) One cannot have
it both ways. Is the defence in question
circular, or is it self-contradictory? - What about the other circularity issue (p. 123)?
- Q2 How do Loux and Russell try to secure the
bundle theory against the objection that all
subject-predicate propositions are tautologies
(and all predicates necessary) since any
predicate (property) is always already contained
in the subject (bundle)? - Q3 Describe the core-bundle approach to
restoring a distinction between necessary and
accidental properties. Is it more promising? What
about the WIP-property approach? - Q5 Thoughts on VCs account of Leibnizs reasons
for holding the PII?
39Casullo, A Fourth Version of the Bundle Theory
- Introduction Since there is a fourth
(Russell/Bergmann/Casta-neda) version of the BT
that is immune to the last three objections
(renumbered O1,O2,O3) Van Cleve (VC) brings
against the second version, the BT is still
unrefuted. - I. Step (i) Summary of VCs last three
criticisms of the second version on which (1) A
thing is a bundle of co-instantiated properties. - Step (ii) Distinction of the problems of (a)
individuation and (b) identity across time. (a)
(b) are solved together by the AST, but
separately by both the BPT and the fourth
version of the BT BBT (the two-tiered
bundle-bundle theory) - Step (iii) Replacement of the BT that holds (1)
with a BBT which affirms the joint theses (1)
A momentary thing is a bundle of co-instantiated
properties and (2) An enduring thing is a series
of momentary things in some contingent relation
R. - Step (iv) Demonstration that BBT, unlike BTU, is
not susceptible to O1 or O2.
40Casullo, A Fourth Version of the Bundle Theory
- II. Demonstration that BBT, unlike BTU, is not
susceptible to O3 (BTU?PII counter-examples show
-PII therefore BTU) - Step (i) Distinguish strong (SBT) and weak
versions (WBT) the latter is not committed to
the necessary truth of PII, but only to (3) No
two things in fact have all properties in common. - Step (ii) Substitute for O3 a weaker version of
the objection called O4 to the effect that (3) is
empirically unsupported. - Step (iii) what makes 04 seem a plausible
objection to (3) is that the reductivist WBT
cannot appeal to their unique spatial and
temporal properties in order to individuate
particulars without circularly (or
inconsistently) appealing to irreducible things
as spatio-temporal reference points. In other
words, spatial and temporal properties are not
pure properties, and (4) No two things in fact
have all pure properties in common is empirically
unsupported. - Step (iv) Way out The WBT can be further
weakened by substituting (5) a small number of
things for (4) no two things and (5) is
empirically well supported.
41Casullo, A Fourth Version of the Bundle Theory
- III. Consideration of O3 as the only objection
capable of refuting the SBT now that O1 and O2
have been shown to have no force against it. - Step (i) The standard form of O3 is refutation of
PII by counter-example. - Step (ii) Consideration of whether
counter-examples of PII are possible if (as
Russell and Goodman argue) position in physical
space is among the pure (monadic) properties of a
thing, then in order to imagine two objects one
must imagine them as occupying different places
in the visual field, and counter-examples like
Blacks fail. - Conclusion Even the SBT remains unrefuted.
42Part Three Causality
43Competing Theories
Types of Theory of Causality
2. Modal Theories Committed to Causal Necessity
or Necessary Connection
1. Non-modal or Eliminative Theories (No
Necessity or Necessary Connection involved in
the Causal Relation)
(a) Regularity Theories (Hume, J.S. Mill, Mackie)
(e) Intuitionist Theories (Kant)
(b) Counter-factual Analysis (Lewis)
(d) Entailment Theories (Ewing)
(c) Direct Observation Theory (Anscombe, Armstrong
)
44Types of Necessity
necessity
- de re necessity
- necessity of things
- real necessity (in the world)
- de dicto necessity
- necessity of propositions
- of necessary truths (and
- falsehoods)
- logical necessity
- (or impossibility)
de re metaphysical necessity
de re causal or natural necessity
psycho- logical mind-mind causal interactions
connections
physical body-body causal inter- actions
and connections
psycho-physical mind-body causal interactions
and connections
necessary properties (essentialism)
a necessary being (God) (theism)
45Ewing, Cause
- 1. The Empiricist Regularity Theory and Three
Criticisms - The Humean theory (that cause and effect are
nothing but a particular instance of a regular
sequence of events similar to the cause followed
by events similar to the effect) cannot account
for - (a) the causes of unique events
- (b) the distinction of (i) those regular
sequences that are merely casual (accidental
correlations) from (ii) those that are genuinely
causal - (c) rationality, freedom, and memory (for
beliefs to be rational they must be determined to
exist by, and not just follow upon, a
consideration of reasons for actions to be free,
they must be determined to occur by the will and
for memories to be reliable they must be
determined to exist by the events remembered and
by nothing else).
46Ewing, Cause
- 2. The Rationalist or Entailment Theory
-
- The theory that the effect follows necessarily
from the cause in a manner analogous to that in
which the conclusion of an inference follows from
the premise has four arguments in its favour and
three against. - In its favour
- (a) we can (i.e. are in fact justified) in
making causal (inductive) inferences this makes
sense if the conclusions are somehow entailed by
the evidence - (b) that things behave in certain ways does not
seem to be a coincidence (on a cosmic scale), but
to have reasons and the reason seems to be that
such behaviour is somehow entailed by their
natures. - (c) we have direct, positive insight into a
quasi-logical connection in psychological matters - (d) we have no other way to justify the
rationality of induction
47Ewing, Cause
- Arguments against the Entailment View (with
Ewings rebuttals) - (i) we do not have any positive insight into a
logical or quasi-logical connection between
events (rebuttal we dont have a positive
insight that there isnt one either it may be
there, but as yet undiscovered, as are many
actually existing logical connections in
mathematics, for example) - (ii) effects succeed their causes in time, while
logical relations of entailment between
propositions are timeless (rebuttal doesnt
suffice to disprove a necessary connection of a
temporal sort, if there is independent evidence
for it) - (iii) causal reasoning gives probability,
logical reasoning certainty (rebuttal lacking
direct insight into the full cause, we make
inferences that are only probable. But the full
cause may still entail the effect with perfect
necessity/certainty).
48Questions for Discussion
- 1. What is the common sense view of causality? Is
the entailment theory more closely akin to it
than the regularity theory? - 2. In what way does the regularity view make
causation something that can be empirically
observed? Isnt Humes whole point that nothing
like a necessary connection can be observed? - 3. How does the regularity view eliminate the a
priori. - 4. What do you think of Ewings direct insight
argument on p. 279? Is it refuted by the fact
that we are sometimes wrong about causal
connections? - 5. How does the argument from the rationality of
induction (p. 280) go?
49Anscombe, Causality and Determination
- 1. Breaking the Tie between Causality and
Determination - Step I. The historical connection (Aristotle to
Russell) between causation and (a) necessitation
(determination), (b) universality, (c) the DI/DC
(difference of issue/difference of circumstances
principle). - Note the similarity between DI/DC and Humes
principle SC/SE (Same Cause/Same Effect) - Step 2. The core idea of causation is
derivation (this coming from, arising out of,
having as source that) necessitation and
universality are super-added ideas what makes
one think otherwise is Humes thesis that we can
never observe causality in individual cases, and
that even in such cases we are really thinking of
what always happens in cases of the same kind.
50Anscombe, Causality and Determination
- Step 3. Two replies to Humes thesis (1)
turning the tables on Hume, it can be replied
that in Humes sense of observe (the way we
observe redness, for example) we dont even
observe physical events (but only our mental
sense-data) but (2) in the sense in which we
actually observe physical things and events (e.g.
fire) we do indeed observe causality. - Re (b), in assigning a cause we do not think of
laws in the sense of exceptionless regularity
under controlled and constant conditions so much
as the inconstant and uncontrolled conditions
(different circumstances) under which that which
the law prescribes does not happen (different
issue). - 2. The Innovations of Indeterministic Physics as
Breaking the Tie
51Mackie, Causes and Conditions
- 1. The received formula A causes B A is a 1
necessary and 2 sufficient condition of B and a
first modification. - Step 1 Introduction of the notion of an INUS
condition - A is at least an INUS condition B A is an
indispensable (non-redundant) part of some
complex set of both positive and negative
()conditions (e.g. ABC, or, substituting X for
BC, AX) which are jointly minimally sufficient
(but not necessary) for B. (Here indispensable
means that, without A, X would not have produced
B minimally sufficient means that no
dispensable or redundant factors are included in
X and not necessary means that was at least
one other set of minimally conditions (e.g. DEF,
or simply Y). -
- Thus A is an Insufficient but Necessary part of
a condition which is itself Unnecessary but
Sufficient for the result (an INUS condition).
52Mackie, Causes and Conditions
- Step 2 Full Analysis of A caused B as
- (i) A is at least an INUS condition of B
- (ii) A was present
- (iii) the other factors in X were also present
(if positive) or absent (if negative) - (iv) no other set of sufficient conditions, Y,
was present. - 2. Further Modification of (i) based on the
notion of a causal field - (A is at least an INUS condition B in the field
F) which solves the problem of the impossibility
of giving sufficient conditions short of the
whole prior state of the universe) - 3. Analysis of General Causal Statements
53Questions
- 1. Name two sorts of circumstances under which A
would be more than an INUS-condition, namely a
necessary condition of B? - 2. Explain what Mackie means by a condition of
these forms (AX or Y), (A or Y), AX, A. - 3. How does Mackie analyze credit restriction
causes unemployment and eating sweets causes
tooth decay.
54Part IV The Reality of Time
55Theories of Time
Realist Theories
Anti-realist (or Idealist) Theories (Parmenides, P
lato, Spinoza, Kant(?), Hegel Bradley,
and McTaggart)
B-Theorists Time is an eternal frame-work
of before/after relations that serves, along
with space, to situate things
events four-dimensionally and tenselessly, with
no spe- cial status for the present
A-Theorists Time is a non- relational
but tensed property of things events in time,
i.e. that pass from future, to present, to past
Presentists (Descartes?, Prior)
Four-dimensionalist Theorists (Hera- cleitus ?,
Broad, Taylor)
Old Tense- less Theory (Leibniz, Russell, Carnap,
early Smart, Williams Quine)
New Tense- less Theory (later Smart, Mellor)
56The A- and B- Theories
The A-Theory 1. Transientist or Flux
Theory whereby there is something ontologically
privileged about the present in relation to past
and future 2. Presentism or Four-Dimentionalist
reality consists of the present alone or the
present, past, and future, with a Special status
for the present 3. Anti-reductionist Past,
present, future and tensed verb forms express
objective features of things, events, and time
so that tensed language is irreducible (must be
taken at face value)
The B-Theory 1.
Eternalist/Relationalist/Equirealist Time is an
eternal framework of relations of earlier than,
later than and simultaneous within which every
event and thing has an unchanging (and equally
real) position 2. Four-Dimensionalist Things and
events are spread out in time as well as in
space (in accordance with the best scientific
theories) the regions of time equally
real. 3. Reductivist the predicates
present, past and future and all tensed
descrip- tions are subjective, i.e. relative to
the present of the speaker they can be
translated into the tenseless terms of the
B-theory either through token- reflexive
analysis or the use of dates
57McTaggart, Time Overview
- Preliminaries Distinction of two ways of being
in time (1) being in the B- series (a system
of timeless relations of earlier and later,
among events) (2) being in the A-series (the
allegedly necessary passage of each event
and each moment of time from future to present
to past) - I. Stage One of the Argument
- P1 C ? T (if no real change, then time is
unreal) - P2 As ? C (if no real A-series, then no real
change) - C1 \ As ? T (if no A-series, then time is
unreal) - Corollary As ? Bs (if no A-series, then no
B-series, since the B-series is a set of
temporal relations and without the A-series
there is neither time nor temporal relations) - Consideration of Three Objections each of which
tries to show that the A-series is inessential to
time, i.e. that the B-series is sufficient. - II. Stage Two of the Argument
- P3 ?As (it is logically impossible for an
A-series to exist) - C2 \ T (hence time is unreal, i.e. nothing
that exists can be temporal i.e. really in
time, although we have no experience that does
not appear to be temporal)
58McTaggart, Time P1 is Axiomatic
- It would, I suppose, be universally admitted
i.e. it is a self-evident axiom that time
involves change i.e. there could be no time if
nothing changed and no change if there were no
time. - So T ? C (time if and only if change)
- \C ? T
- i.e. if no change, then time is unreal
59McTaggart, Time P2
- P2 As?C (if no real A-series, then no real
change) - This itself is a conclusion of a modus tollens
argument that runs -
- First Premise ?(Bs As Ch) ? ?(Ch As)
- If then the B-series without the A-series can
constitute time, change must be possible without
the A-series, i.e. - Second Premise ?(Ch As)
- But this is impossible since relations of
earlier and later among events or among moments
of absolute time are permanent and no event can
cease to be or alter its position simply as an
event in the B-series, i.e. change must be change
from being future to being present or being
present to being past. - Conclusion ?(Bs As Ch) i.e. the
B-series without the A series is not sufficient
for change, or P2 As?C
60McTaggart, Time Three Objections
- 1.Objection stemming from Russels B-Theory of
Time A-series does not exist per se tensed
statements about past, present, and future events
(e.g. The battle of Waterloo is in the past)
are reducible to timeless (or untensed)
propositions stating that the event is earlier,
later, or simultaneous with a particular
utterance in the B-series (e.g. The battle of
Waterloo is earlier than this judgment). - Reply Russell rejects the A-series, but believes
in change. But it has been argued that if no
A-series, then no change. New support Everything
about a fact, including its place in the
B-series, is unchanging. (Example death of Queen
Anne.) For facts to change, then, they must
change their place in the A-series.
61McTaggart, Time Three Objections
- 2. Objection that there are non-existent
(fictional) series where the events are in
temporal relations of earlier and later (a
B-series) but do not change from future, to
present, to past (not in the A-series) because
they are do not exist at any time. - Reply The series is not temporal unless in the
A-series, and since only things that exist are in
the A-series, only things that exist are in time.
Things may be believed or imagined to exist in
time only if believed or imagined to exist in the
A-series. - 3. Objection that there could be several
different time series instead of just one, so
that there would not be one present in relation
to which events were future, then present, then
past. - Reply there would still be some present for each
independent time series for it to be a time
series at all. -
62Broad, Ostensible Temporality
- McTaggarts philosophical howlers in P3
- 1) treating absolute becoming the A-series as
if it were a species of qualitative change such
that the present, past, and future of the
A-series are incompatible qualities or
determinates of the same determinable (time)
which can no more be consistently attributed to
the same subject that red and blue as
determinates of the same determinable (colour)
can be attributed to the same entity (either
simultaneously or timelessly, though they can be
predicated of the same thing at different times). - 2) replacing temporal copulas i.e. is (now),
was (in the past), and will be (in future) by
non-temporal copulas is timelessly or eternally
or sempiternally plus temporal adjectives or
temporal predicates (presentness, pastness,
futurity). - Thus, it will rain there is (timelessly) a
rainy event and it has the property of futurity.
And generally x (an event or time) is, x
was, and x will be x has (timelessly) the
incompatible temporal properties or qualities of
presence, pastness, and futurity.
63Taylor, Time and Eternity
- Introduction The eternalist (Platonic) argument
against becoming and the datum or appalling
fact which it denies. - I. Description of the datum The pure becoming
(becoming older) of (a) things, (b) events, and
(c) time itself, whether absolute in the case of
the now existent or relational in that of the
not-yet or no-longer existent, as the
presupposition of all other change in events and
things. - II. Rational reflexion on the datum and the
absurdities it brings to light (1) both
observable and a priori (2) events are changes
(ordinary changes in the properties of something)
and yet themselves change (pure becoming) (3)
this pure becoming seems to requires the
background of another, metaphysical time during
which its intervals are born, age, and recede
into the past (4) no rate can be assigned this
passage of things from future to present to
past. - III.The futility of attempts to eliminate pure
becoming from our talk about objects, events, and
time itself in order to rid ourselves of these
difficulties.
64Taylor, Time and Eternity Questions
- 1. Do we really observe or apprehend pure
becoming (as T. assumes in his description of
the datum) or do we always observe particular
changes, qualitative, quantitative, relational,
coming-into-being and passing-away? - 2. Explain the cat-and-mouse analogy.
- 3. Granted that its a direct insight that being
in time is a permanent or structural feature of
world of our experience, is either the A-series
(pure becoming present, then past of the future)
or the B-series (relations of before, after, and
simultaneity) likewise an immediately intuited
structural feature of time, or are they rather
theories about the structure of time? - 4. Does Taylor privilege any of the three
dimensions of time (past, present, or future)?
What would Prior say?
65Some Time Axioms
- 1. Time is one- (as space is three-) dimensional.
- 2. There is only one (universal) time of which
all (particular) times are parts. - 3. Time changes/elapses/flows.
- 4. The flow of time is uni-directional or
irreversible (flows from the future through the
present to the past), such that, for example,
what is done cannot be made undone, i.e. you
cannot turn the clock back, nor can you
stop/pause time. - 5. Relations of before and after are transitive
and asymmetrical and unalterably permanent. - 6. Time is impossible without change and change
impossible without time. - 7. Time presupposes things existing in time (no
empty time, pace Kant) - 8. Nothing can change from future to past without
having been present - 9. The flow of time has no rate or speed.
66Part V Realism and Anti-Realism
67The Aristotelian Origins of Traditional Realism
- Spoken words are symbola (signs or tokens) of
pathemata (states) in the soul. And just as
written words are not the same for all men,
neither are spoken ones. But the pathemata
themselves, of which these words are primarily
semeia, signs, are the same for all, as are also
the things (pragmata) of which the pathemata are
likenesses (homoiomata). (Aristotle, De Int.
16a3-8) - So
- (1) human thoughts (the states or pathemata of
the soul) are likenesses, homoiomata, which
represent (2) pragmata, things, while both (3)
the spoken (ta en tei phonei) and (4) the written
word (ta graphomena) (human language) signify
what is thought about those things. Hereby
written words again just represent (in the manner
of signs, semeia) spoken language. Aristotle
notes that while (3) and (4), the sound of spoken
and the look of written language, differ for
different menfor Greeks and barbarians, for
example(1) the things themselves and (2) the
states of the soul are the same (tauta) for all
men
68Realism Basic Claims
- Truth and falsity are the values an
epistemically unconstrained bivalent relation
of correspondence or non-correspondence of a
belief (thought) or statement (written or
uttered) to a mind-independently existing object,
i.e. - 1. The locus of meaning and truth is the
judgment - Beliefs and statements are representations of
things which must be either true or false
(bivalence) - 2.Truth-conditional (correspondence) theory of
meaning and truth - The truth of beliefs and statements consists in
their correspondence with a mind-independent
world. - 3. Truth is epistemically unconstrained
- The correspondence (or otherwise) of a belief or
statement with its object is independent of
whet