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Single Idea 191
[filed under theme 15. Nature of Minds / C. Capacities of Minds / 7. Seeing Resemblance
]
Full Idea
Everything resembles everything else up to a point.
Gist of Idea
Everything resembles everything else up to a point
Source
Plato (Protagoras [c.380 BCE], 331d)
Book Ref
Plato: 'Protagoras and Meno', ed/tr. Guthrie,W K C [Penguin 1956], p.64
The
12 ideas
with the same theme
[seeing recurrences of properties and structures]:
191
|
Everything resembles everything else up to a point
[Plato]
|
17712
|
General ideas are the connection by resemblance to some particular
[Hume]
|
2210
|
A picture of a friend strengthens our idea of him, by resemblance
[Hume]
|
8544
|
Hume does not distinguish real resemblances among degrees of resemblance
[Shoemaker on Hume]
|
15755
|
Hume needs a notion which includes degrees of resemblance
[Shoemaker on Hume]
|
9081
|
We don't recognise comparisons by something in our minds; the concepts result from the comparisons
[Mill]
|
5410
|
I learn the universal 'resemblance' by seeing two shades of green, and their contrast with red
[Russell]
|
16934
|
General terms depend on similarities among things
[Quine]
|
16938
|
To learn yellow by observation, must we be told to look at the colour?
[Quine]
|
8486
|
Standards of similarity are innate, and the spacing of qualities such as colours can be mapped
[Quine]
|
16947
|
Similarity is just interchangeability in the cosmic machine
[Quine]
|
12661
|
The different types of resemblance don't resemble one another
[Fodor]
|