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Full Idea
The category of objects embraces indiscriminately what would anciently have been distinguished as substances and as modes or states of substances.
Gist of Idea
The category of objects incorporates the old distinction of substances and their modes
Source
Willard Quine (The Scope and Language of Science [1954], §6)
Book Ref
Quine,Willard: 'Ways of Paradox and other essays' [Harvard 1976], p.242
A Reaction
This nicely captures Quine's elimination of properties, by presenting them as inseparable from their objects/substances. Armstrong calls this 'Ostrich Nominalism' (for refusing to address the universals problem) but Quineans are unshaken.
8461 | The category of objects incorporates the old distinction of substances and their modes [Quine] |
8462 | A hallucination can, like an ague, be identified with its host; the ontology is physical, the idiom mental [Quine] |
8463 | Maths can be reduced to logic and set theory [Quine] |