more from this thinker
|
more from this text
Single Idea 8270
[filed under theme 7. Existence / B. Change in Existence / 4. Events / a. Nature of events
]
Full Idea
My own broadly Aristotelian view is that events are changes (and unchanges) in the properties and relations of persisting objects.
Gist of Idea
Events are changes or non-changes in properties and relations of persisting objects
Source
E.J. Lowe (The Possibility of Metaphysics [1998], 4.4)
Book Ref
Lowe,E.J.: 'The Possibility of Metaphysics' [OUP 2001], p.97
A Reaction
This needs an account of what it is that persists, and the philosophers' (but not physicists') concept of 'substance' fills this role. It is rather hard to give identity-conditions for an event if it is an 'unchange'. How would you count such events?
The
17 ideas
with the same theme
[what we should take events to consist of]:
15832
|
Events are states of affairs that occur at certain places and times
[Chisholm]
|
8439
|
Maybe each event has only one possible causal history
[Bennett]
|
8440
|
Maybe an event's time of occurrence is essential to it
[Bennett]
|
7771
|
We need 'events' to explain adverbs, which are adjectival predicates of events
[Davidson, by Lycan]
|
8860
|
Language-learning is not good enough evidence for the existence of events
[Yablo on Davidson]
|
17520
|
Events do not have natural boundaries, and we have to set them
[Ayers]
|
15561
|
The events that suit semantics may not be the events that suit causation
[Lewis]
|
15565
|
Events have inbuilt essences, as necessary conditions for their occurrence
[Lewis]
|
15566
|
Events are classes, and so there is a mereology of their parts
[Lewis]
|
15567
|
Some events involve no change; they must, because causal histories involve unchanges
[Lewis]
|
3310
|
If slowness is a property of walking rather than the walker, we must allow that events exist
[Benardete,JA]
|
8270
|
Events are changes or non-changes in properties and relations of persisting objects
[Lowe]
|
4219
|
Numerically distinct events of the same kind (like two battles) can coincide in space and time
[Lowe]
|
8973
|
Einstein's relativity brought events into ontology, as the terms of a simultaneity relationships
[Simons]
|
6143
|
Prolonged events don't seem to endure or exist at any particular time
[Merricks]
|
12840
|
I do not think there is a general identity condition for events
[Simons]
|
14541
|
Events are essentially changes; property exemplifications are just states of affairs
[Mumford/Anjum]
|