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9152 | If green is abstracted from a thing, it is only seen as a type if it is common to many things [Fine,K] |
Full Idea: In traditional abstraction, the colour green merely has the intrinsic property of being green, other properties of things being abstracted away. But why should that be regarded as a type? It must be because the property is common to the instances. | |
From: Kit Fine (Cantorian Abstraction: Recon. and Defence [1998], §5) | |
A reaction: A nice question which shows that the much-derided single act of abstraction is not sufficient to arrive at a concept, so that abstraction is a more complex matter (perhaps even a rational one) than simple empiricists believe. |