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Single Idea 9017
[filed under theme 8. Modes of Existence / B. Properties / 12. Denial of Properties
]
Full Idea
Predicates are not names; predicates are the other parties to predication.
Gist of Idea
Predicates are not names; predicates are the other parties to predication
Source
Willard Quine (Philosophy of Logic [1970], Ch.2)
Book Ref
Quine,Willard: 'Philosophy of Logic' [Prentice-Hall 1970], p.27
A Reaction
Does a wife only exist as party to a marriage? There's something missing here. We are taking predication to be primitive, but we then seem to single out one part of the process - the object - while ignoring the remainder. What are Quinean objects?
The
18 ideas
with the same theme
[rejection of the category of properties]:
16621
|
Accidents are not parts of bodies (like blood in a cloth); they have accidents as things have a size
[Hobbes]
|
4546
|
We realise that properties are sensations of the feeling subject, not part of the thing
[Nietzsche]
|
6063
|
Russell can't attribute existence to properties
[McGinn on Russell]
|
18439
|
Because things can share attributes, we cannot individuate attributes clearly
[Quine]
|
9017
|
Predicates are not names; predicates are the other parties to predication
[Quine]
|
7925
|
There is no proper identity concept for properties, and it is hard to distinguish one from two
[Quine]
|
10295
|
Quine suggests that properties can be replaced with extensional entities like sets
[Quine, by Shapiro]
|
8479
|
Don't analyse 'red is a colour' as involving properties. Say 'all red things are coloured things'
[Quine, by Orenstein]
|
6078
|
Quine brought classes into semantics to get rid of properties
[Quine, by McGinn]
|
3322
|
Quine says that if second-order logic is to quantify over properties, that can be done in first-order predicate logic
[Quine, by Benardete,JA]
|
7618
|
Very nominalistic philosophers deny properties, though scientists accept them
[Putnam]
|
5456
|
Redness is not a property as it is not mind-independent
[Ellis]
|
8959
|
Field presumes properties can be eliminated from science
[Field,H, by Szabó]
|
3906
|
If possible worlds are needed to define properties, maybe we should abandon properties
[Scruton]
|
4029
|
Nominalists ask why we should postulate properties at all
[Mellor/Oliver]
|
16263
|
Fundamental physics seems to suggest there are no such things as properties
[Maudlin]
|
7965
|
Does the knowledge of each property require an infinity of accompanying knowledge?
[Macdonald,C]
|
19121
|
We can reduce properties to true formulas
[Halbach/Leigh]
|