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2 ideas
13042 | If dependence is well-founded, with no infinite backward chains, this implies substances [Potter] |
Full Idea: The argument that the relation of dependence is well-founded ...is a version of the classical arguments for substance. ..Any conceptual scheme which genuinely represents a world cannot contain infinite backward chains of meaning. | |
From: Michael Potter (Set Theory and Its Philosophy [2004], 03.3) | |
A reaction: Thus the iterative conception of set may imply a notion of substance, and Barwise's radical attempt to ditch the Axiom of Foundation (Idea 13039) was a radical attempt to get rid of 'substances'. Potter cites Wittgenstein as a fan of substances here. |
13041 | Collections have fixed members, but fusions can be carved in innumerable ways [Potter] |
Full Idea: A collection has a determinate number of members, whereas a fusion may be carved up into parts in various equally valid (although perhaps not equally interesting) ways. | |
From: Michael Potter (Set Theory and Its Philosophy [2004], 02.1) | |
A reaction: This seems to sum up both the attraction and the weakness of mereology. If you doubt the natural identity of so-called 'objects', then maybe classical mereology is the way to go. |