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Full Idea
Colour is in body and therefore also in an individual body; for were it not in some individual body it would not be in body at all.
Gist of Idea
Colour must be in an individual body, or it is not embodied
Source
Aristotle (Categories [c.331 BCE], 02b02)
Book Ref
Aristotle: 'Categories and De Interpretatione', ed/tr. Ackrill,J.R. [OUP 1963], p.6
A Reaction
This may be just a truism, or it may be the Aristotelian commitment to universals only existing if they are instantiated.
11037 | Colour must be in an individual body, or it is not embodied [Aristotle] |
12094 | No universals exist separately from particulars [Aristotle] |
17677 | Past, present and future must be equally real if universals are instantiated [Armstrong] |
17686 | Universals are abstractions from states of affairs [Armstrong] |
15442 | Universals are abstractions from their particular instances [Armstrong, by Lewis] |
15747 | Universals aren't parts of things, because that relationship is transitive, and universals need not be [Lewis] |
10730 | If universals ground similarities, what about uniquely instantiated universals? [Oliver] |
10724 | Located universals are wholly present in many places, and two can be in the same place [Oliver] |
7963 | Aristotle's instantiated universals cannot account for properties of abstract objects [Oliver] |
4454 | The One-In-Many view says universals have abstract existence, but exist in particulars [Moreland] |
10197 | An immanent universal is wholly present in more than one place [Zimmerman,DW] |
9486 | Why should a universal's existence depend on instantiation in an existing particular? [Bird] |