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Full Idea
There are reasons to believe that there are natural kinds that might never be instantiated, such as a transuranic element, capable of existing for some fraction of a second, but which has never actually existed anywhere.
Gist of Idea
There might be uninstantiated natural kinds, such as transuranic elements which have never occurred
Source
Brian Ellis (Scientific Essentialism [2001], 2.05)
Book Ref
Ellis,Brian: 'Scientific Essentialism' [CUP 2007], p.81
A Reaction
He cautiously claims that kinds are ontologically prior to their individual members. I would say that there is no natural kind of the type that he describes. He says you have at least some grounds for predicting what kinds are possible.
15170 | We distinguish species by their nominal essence, not by their real essence [Locke] |
16937 | You can't base kinds just on resemblance, because chains of resemblance are a muddle [Quine] |
13583 | There might be uninstantiated natural kinds, such as transuranic elements which have never occurred [Ellis] |
11860 | Lawlike propensities are enough to individuate natural kinds [Wiggins] |
15693 | One sample of gold is enough, but one tree doesn't give the height of trees [Gelman] |
6769 | In the Kripke-Putnam view only nuclear physicists can know natural kinds [Bird] |
6774 | Darwinism suggests that we should have a native ability to detect natural kinds [Bird] |
14956 | Explanation by kinds and by clusters of properties just express the stability of reality [Ladyman/Ross] |
13285 | Natural kinds support inductive inferences, from previous samples to the next one [Koslicki] |