9 ideas
17435 | Objects do not naturally form countable units [Koslicki] |
17433 | We can still count squares, even if they overlap [Koslicki] |
17439 | There is no deep reason why we count carrots but not asparagus [Koslicki] |
17434 | We struggle to count branches and waves because our concepts lack clear boundaries [Koslicki] |
8463 | Maths can be reduced to logic and set theory [Quine] |
17436 | We talk of snow as what stays the same, when it is a heap or drift or expanse [Koslicki] |
8461 | The category of objects incorporates the old distinction of substances and their modes [Quine] |
8462 | A hallucination can, like an ague, be identified with its host; the ontology is physical, the idiom mental [Quine] |
3284 | There is no one theory of how to act (or what to believe) [Nagel] |