more on this theme     |     more from this thinker


Single Idea 4444

[filed under theme 8. Modes of Existence / B. Properties / 13. Tropes / a. Nature of tropes ]

Full Idea

There is a 'moderate' nominalism (found in G.F.Stout, for example) which says that properties and relations do exist, but that they are particulars rather than universals.

Gist of Idea

One moderate nominalist view says that properties and relations exist, but they are particulars

Source

David M. Armstrong (Universals [1995], p.504)

Book Ref

'A Companion to Metaphysics', ed/tr. Kim,Jaegwon/Sosa,Ernest [Blackwell 1995], p.504


A Reaction

Both this view and the 'mereological' view seem to be ducking the problem. If you have two red particulars and a green one, how do we manage to spot the odd one out?

Related Idea

Idea 7972 Tropes are abstract particulars, not concrete particulars, so the theory is not nominalist [Macdonald,C]


The 14 ideas from 'Universals'

'Resemblance Nominalism' finds that in practice the construction of resemblance classes is hard [Armstrong]
'Resemblance Nominalism' says properties are resemblances between classes of particulars [Armstrong]
'Concept Nominalism' says a 'universal' property is just a mental concept applied to lots of things [Armstrong]
'Predicate Nominalism' says that a 'universal' property is just a predicate applied to lots of things [Armstrong]
Concept and predicate nominalism miss out some predicates, and may be viciously regressive [Armstrong]
'Class Nominalism' may explain properties if we stick to 'natural' sets, and ignore random ones [Armstrong]
'Class Nominalism' says that properties or kinds are merely membership of a set (e.g. of white things) [Armstrong]
'Class Nominalism' cannot explain co-extensive properties, or sets with random members [Armstrong]
'Mereological Nominalism' sees whiteness as a huge white object consisting of all the white things [Armstrong]
'Mereological Nominalism' may work for whiteness, but it doesn't seem to work for squareness [Armstrong]
One moderate nominalist view says that properties and relations exist, but they are particulars [Armstrong]
If properties and relations are particulars, there is still the problem of how to classify and group them [Armstrong]
It is claimed that some universals are not exemplified by any particular, so must exist separately [Armstrong]
Should we decide which universals exist a priori (through words), or a posteriori (through science)? [Armstrong]