estudos:markus-gabriel:markus-gabriel-2015-49-51-propriedades
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| + | ====== propriedades (2015: | ||
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| + | //Data: 2024-01-11 13:28// | ||
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| + | As propriedades são introduzidas para explicar a diferença entre indivíduos. As propriedades que cumprem esta função sem gerar paradoxos podem ser designadas por " | ||
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| + | Properties are introduced in order to explain the difference between individuals. Properties that serve this job without generating paradox can be called ‘proper properties’. A proper property accordingly is a property reference to which puts one into the position of distinguishing one object from another in a domain. In particular, individuals differ from each other by having different proper properties. We can now change our understanding of individuals and claim more generally that individuals are objects that have proper properties. A first and still rough understanding of the concept object would have it that it is anything that can become the content of a truth-apt thought. As I will lay out in more detail in Part II, these definitions actually have to be further qualified. However, at this point in the argument we can think of individuals as individuated by their proper properties, of facts as being truths about individuals, | ||
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| + | Traditionally, | ||
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| + | Individuals certainly are not literally different from their properties, for their properties define what they are. There is a sense in which some properties can justifiably be regarded as more essential, as long as this does not mislead us into thinking that there is a realm of essences delineated by some overall criterion of ‘naturalness’ or ‘eliteness’. There is no essence of essences, that is, nothing that generally makes it the case that all objects share some essence, such as only contingently having disjunctive properties or being a four-dimensional thing, say. Also, there is no independent reason for identifying individuals with some particular kind of individuals. Not all individuals are spatio-temporal, | ||
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| + | I know that this belief in the physical world has established a sort of reign of terror. You have got to treat with disrespect whatever does not fit into the physical world. But that is really very unfair to the things that do not fit in. They are just as much there as the things that do. The physical world is a sort of governing aristocracy, | ||
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| + | That the number 273 and the witches in Faust not only exist, but are also individuals should be obvious: they have all the properties [51] they need in order to be what they are (even if the witches differ from, say, Tony Blair by not having all the properties a typical human being has, such as having a determinate number of hairs), and they are also clearly different from each other by virtue of their properties, even though there still is an interesting problem for semantics tied to the question of whether the fact that the witches in Faust have all their properties means that they are really individuals. It has often been argued in the philosophy of fiction — or rather in the philosophy of the semantics of fiction — that fictional characters are not completely determined, as we do not know, for instance, whether the witches in Faust have ever been to Paris or whether they are extremely hairy. There seems to be no fact of the matter deciding these questions. Yet, I will maintain throughout this book that this does not conflict with the fact that these witches are individuals, | ||
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| + | </ | ||
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| + | ---- | ||
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| + | //GABRIEL, Markus. Fields of Sense. A New Realist Ontology. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2015// | ||
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| + | {{tag>" | ||
