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Single Idea 13793

[filed under theme 9. Objects / D. Essence of Objects / 7. Essence and Necessity / a. Essence as necessary properties ]

Full Idea

For Lewis, if a property possessed by a given individual or kind is missing in some of the contextually relevant counterparts, that property is accidental to the individual or kind; if it is possessed by all of them, that property is essential.

Gist of Idea

An essential property is one possessed by all counterparts

Source

report of David Lewis (On the Plurality of Worlds [1986], 248-263) by Crawford L. Elder - Real Natures and Familiar Objects 1.4

Book Ref

Elder,Crawford L.: 'Real Natures and Familiar Objects' [MIT 2004], p.18


A Reaction

This is a sophisticated version of the idea that essential properties are just necessary properties. It might make sense with a very sparse view of properties (mainly causal ones), but I think of essences as quite different from necessities.


The 21 ideas with the same theme [essence just is necessary properties]:

The essence is the necessary properties, and the concept includes what is contingent [Leibniz]
The essence is that without which a thing can neither be, nor be conceived to be [Mill]
An essential property is true of an object in any case where it would have existed [Kripke]
De re modality is an object having essential properties [Kripke]
Essentialism says some of a thing's properties are necessary, and could not be absent [Cartwright,R]
An essential property is one had in all the possible worlds where a thing exists [Stalnaker]
Essentially, a has P, always had P, must have had P, and has never had a future without P [Brody]
An object having a property essentially is equivalent to its having it necessarily [Brody]
'Socrates is essentially human' seems to say nothing could be Socrates if it was not human [Stalnaker]
Essentialism is the existence of a definite answer as to whether an entity fulfils a condition [Gibbard]
An essential property is one possessed by all counterparts [Lewis, by Elder]
Kripkean essential properties and relations are necessary, in all genuinely possible worlds [Soames]
Essentialism says some properties must be possessed, if a thing is to exist [Salmon,N]
A relation is essential to two items if it holds in every world where they exist [Forbes,G]
Essential properties are those without which an object could not exist [Forbes,G]
Essentialist claims can be formulated more clearly with quantified modal logic [Fine,K]
Simple modal essentialism refers to necessary properties of an object [Fine,K]
Modern essences are sets of essential predicate-functions [Cover/O'Leary-Hawthorne]
Modern essentialists express essence as functions from worlds to extensions for predicates [Cover/O'Leary-Hawthorne]
The distinction between necessary and essential properties can be ignored [Rocca]
Modal accounts make essence less mysterious, by basing them on the clearer necessity [Vetter]