Ideas from 'Ontological Categories' by Jan Westerhoff [2005], by Theme Structure

[found in 'Ontological Categories' by Westerhoff,Jan [OUP 2005,0-19-928504-7]].

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5. Theory of Logic / F. Referring in Logic / 1. Naming / a. Names
We negate predicates but do not negate names
                        Full Idea: We negate predicates but do not negate names.
                        From: Jan Westerhoff (Ontological Categories [2005], §88)
                        A reaction: This is a point for anyone like Ramsey who wants to collapse the distinction between particulars and universals, or singular terms and their predicates.
7. Existence / E. Categories / 1. Categories
How far down before we are too specialised to have a category?
                        Full Idea: How far down are we allowed to go before the categories become too special to qualify as ontological categories?
                        From: Jan Westerhoff (Ontological Categories [2005], Intro)
                        A reaction: A very nice question, because we can't deny a category to a set with only one member, otherwise the last surviving dodo would not have been a dodo.
Maybe objects in the same category have the same criteria of identity
                        Full Idea: There is an idea that objects belonging to the same category have the same criteria of identity. This view was first explicitly endorsed by Frege (1884), and was later systematized by Dummett (1981).
                        From: Jan Westerhoff (Ontological Categories [2005], Intro)
                        A reaction: This approach is based on identity between equivalence classes. Westerhoff says it means, implausibly, that the resulting categories cannot share properties.
Categories are base-sets which are used to construct states of affairs
                        Full Idea: My fundamental idea is that 'form-sets' are intersubstitutable constituents of states of affairs with the same form, and 'base-sets' are special form-sets which can be used to construct other form-sets. Ontological categories are the base-sets.
                        From: Jan Westerhoff (Ontological Categories [2005], Intro)
                        A reaction: The spirit of this is, of course, to try to achieve the kind of rigour that is expected in contemporary professional philosophy, by aiming for some sort of axiom-system that is related to a well established precise discipline like set theory. Maybe.
Categories can be ordered by both containment and generality
                        Full Idea: Categories are usually not assumed to be ordered by containment, but also be generality.
                        From: Jan Westerhoff (Ontological Categories [2005], §02)
                        A reaction: I much prefer generality, which is responsive to the full picture, whereas containment seems to appeal too much to the orderly and formalised mind. Containments overlap, so we can't dream of a perfectly neat system.
Categories are held to explain why some substitutions give falsehood, and others meaninglessness
                        Full Idea: It is usually assumed of ontological categories that they can explain why certain substitutions make a statement false ('prime' for 'odd'), while others make it meaningless ('sweet' for 'odd', of numbers).
                        From: Jan Westerhoff (Ontological Categories [2005], §05)
                        A reaction: So there is a strong link between big ontological questions, and Ryle's famous identification of the 'category mistake'. The phenomenon of the category mistake is undeniable, and should make us sympathetic to the idea of categories.
Categories systematize our intuitions about generality, substitutability, and identity
                        Full Idea: Systems of ontological categories are systematizations of our intuitions about generality, intersubstitutability, and identity.
                        From: Jan Westerhoff (Ontological Categories [2005], §23)
                        A reaction: I think we might be able to concede this without conceding the relativism about categories which Westerhoff espouses. I would claim that our 'intuitions' are pretty accurate about the joints of nature, and hence accurate about these criteria.
Categories as generalities don't give a criterion for a low-level cut-off point
                        Full Idea: Categories in terms of generality, dependence and containment are unsatisfactory because of the 'cut-off point problem': they don't give an account of how far down the order we can go and be sure we are still dealing with categories.
                        From: Jan Westerhoff (Ontological Categories [2005], §27)
                        A reaction: I don't see why this should be a devastating objection to any theory. I have a very clear notion of a human being, but a very hazy notion of how far back towards its conception a human being extends.
7. Existence / E. Categories / 2. Categorisation
The aim is that everything should belong in some ontological category or other
                        Full Idea: It seems to be one of the central points of constructing systems of ontological categories that everything can be placed in some category or other.
                        From: Jan Westerhoff (Ontological Categories [2005], §49)
                        A reaction: After initial resistance to this, I suppose I have to give in. The phoenix (a unique mythological bird) is called a 'phoenix', though it might just be called 'John' (cf. God). If there were another phoenix, we would know how to categorise it.
7. Existence / E. Categories / 3. Proposed Categories
All systems have properties and relations, and most have individuals, abstracta, sets and events
                        Full Idea: Surveyed ontological systems show overlaps: properties and relations turn up in every system; individuals form part of five systems; abstracta, collections/sets and events are in four; facts are in two.
                        From: Jan Westerhoff (Ontological Categories [2005], §02)
                        A reaction: Westerhoff is a hero for doing such a useful survey. Of course, Quine challenges properties, and relations are commonly given a reductive analysis. Individuals can be challenged, and abstracta reduced. Sets are fictions. Events or facts? Etc.
7. Existence / E. Categories / 5. Category Anti-Realism
Ontological categories are like formal axioms, not unique and with necessary membership
                        Full Idea: I deny the absolutism of a unique system of ontological categories and the essentialist view of membership in ontological categories as necessary features. ...I regard ontological categories as similar to axioms of formalized theories.
                        From: Jan Westerhoff (Ontological Categories [2005], Intro)
                        A reaction: The point is that modern axioms are not fundamental self-evident truths, but an economic set of basic statements from which some system can be derived. There may be no unique set of axioms for a formal system.
Categories merely systematise, and are not intrinsic to objects
                        Full Idea: My conclusion is that categories are relativistic, used for systematization, and that it is not an intrinsic feature of an object to belong to a category, and that there is no fundamental distinction between individuals and properties.
                        From: Jan Westerhoff (Ontological Categories [2005], Intro)
                        A reaction: [compressed] He calls his second conclusion 'anti-essentialist', but I think we can still get an account of (explanatory) essence while agreeing with his relativised view of categories. Wiggins might be his main opponent.
A thing's ontological category depends on what else exists, so it is contingent
                        Full Idea: What ontological category a thing belongs to is not dependent on its inner nature, but dependent on what other things there are in the world, and this is a contingent matter.
                        From: Jan Westerhoff (Ontological Categories [2005], §89)
                        A reaction: This is aimed at those, like Wiggins, who claim that category is essential to a thing, and there is no possible world in which that things could belong to another category. Sounds good, till you try to come up with examples.
9. Objects / D. Essence of Objects / 5. Essence as Kind
Essential kinds may be too specific to provide ontological categories
                        Full Idea: Essential kinds can be very specific, and arguably too specific for the purposes of ontological categories.
                        From: Jan Westerhoff (Ontological Categories [2005], §27)
                        A reaction: Interesting. There doesn't seem to be any precise guideline as to how specific an essential kind might be. In scientific essentialism, each of the isotopes of tin has a distinct essence, but why should they not be categories