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Full Idea
The word 'part' can used whether it is attached, or arbitrarily demarcated, or gerrymandered, or immaterial, or unextended, or spatial, or temporal.
Gist of Idea
Parts may or may not be attached, demarcated, arbitrary, material, extended, spatial or temporal
Source
Achille Varzi (Mereology [2003], 1)
Book Ref
'Stanford Online Encyclopaedia of Philosophy', ed/tr. Stanford University [plato.stanford.edu], p.2
10648 | Mereology need not be nominalist, though it is often taken to be so [Varzi] |
10647 | Parts may or may not be attached, demarcated, arbitrary, material, extended, spatial or temporal [Varzi] |
10651 | If 'part' is reflexive, then identity is a limit case of parthood [Varzi] |
10649 | 'Part' stands for a reflexive, antisymmetric and transitive relation [Varzi] |
10653 | Maybe set theory need not be well-founded [Varzi] |
10652 | Conceivability may indicate possibility, but literary fantasy does not [Varzi] |
10654 | The parthood relation will help to define at least seven basic predicates [Varzi] |
10655 | Are there mereological atoms, and are all objects made of them? [Varzi] |
10658 | Sameness of parts won't guarantee identity if their arrangement matters [Varzi] |
10659 | There is something of which everything is part, but no null-thing which is part of everything [Varzi] |
10661 | 'Composition is identity' says multitudes are the reality, loosely composing single things [Varzi] |