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14733 | An object produces the same percepts with or without a substance, so that is irrelevant to science [Russell] |
Full Idea: There may be a substance at the centre of an object, but is no reason to think so, since the group of events making up the object will produce exactly the same percepts; so the substance, if there is one, is an abstract possibility irrelevant to science. | |
From: Bertrand Russell (The Analysis of Matter [1927], 23) | |
A reaction: All empiricists (as Russell is in this passage) seem to neglect inference to the best explanation. Things can be indirectly testable, and I would say that there are genuine general entities which are too close to abstraction to ever be testable. |