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1. The Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 64 > Issue: 24
Index
...). Anthologies (New —). 225 (7), 457 (14). Autoptic Knowing [abstract ... ¬ FURT. 133 (4). Being Partial to Objects, DANIEL SEDEY ... [review article]. 751 (22). BEROFSKY, BERNARD: RcvicW of W, H ...
2. The Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 67 > Issue: 24
Index to Volume LXVII
...(19). Causes. Objects, and Producers of the Emotions [abstract], KEITH S ... , Objects, and Producers of the Emotions [abstract ... (The —) [abstract], D. C. DENNETT. 835 ...
3. The Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 73 > Issue: 22
Index to Volume LXXIII
... Phenomenalism [abstract]. 601 (17). Objects (Space and ... 22 ... KS, KARL: Plautinga and Other Minds [abstract]. 759 (19 ...
4. The Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 65 > Issue: 24
Index to Volume LXV
...­ DALL, JR. 737 (22). Concepts and Words [abstract], PHILIP ... ABELSON, RAZIEL: Knowledge and Belief. 733 (22 ... B.: A Formalistic Approach to Synonymity [abstract]. 712 ...
5. Philosophia Christi: Volume > 19 > Issue: 2
R. Scott Smith Craig, Anti-Platonism, and Objective Morality
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Though William Lane Craig believes his anti-Platonism is compatible with objective, Christian morality, I argue that it is not. First, I survey the main contours of his nominalism. Second, I discuss how he sees those points in relation to objective, Christian morality. Then, I argue that his view cannot sustain the qualitative aspects of moral virtues or principles, or even human beings. Moreover, Craig’s view loses any connection between those morals and humans, thereby doing great violence to objective, Christian morals. Finally, I sketch two advantages of a Platonic realism in regards to Christian morals.
... doctrine that uncreated, metaphysically abstract objects (AOs) exist, fatally ... on the Problem of God and Abstract Objects (New York ... is true, then uncreated, metaphysically abstract objects (AOs ...
6. Symposium: Volume > 22 > Issue: 1
Rick Elmore Identity, Exchange, and Violence: The Importance of Marxism for Reconciling Adorno’s Metaphysics and Politics
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This paper follows the question of violence as a guide to exploring the link between the metaphysical, social, and political in Adorno’s thought. More specifically, I argue that violence, in the form of the exclusion, domination, and fungibility of life, marks the shared space of the metaphysical, material, and ethical for Adorno. Hence, this project contests the longstanding Habermas-inspired notion that there is something unclear in the way in which Adorno’s metaphysical and methodological critiques connect to his social and political concerns—most specifically, his desire to address real suffering. In addition, this paper contributes to the growing interest in Adorno’s Marxism, showing that it is through his commitments to Marx that Adorno sees the real, material importance of his critique of metaphysics and ontology, as well as the possibility for resisting the forces of social domination.Cet article suit la question de la violence comme une guide pour explorer le lien entre la métaphysique, le social et le politique dans la pensée d’Adorno. Plus particulièrement, je soutiens que la violence, sous la forme de l’exclusion, la domination et la fongibilité de la vie, marque l’espace partagé de la métaphysique, du matériel et de l’éthique chez Adorno. Dès lors, ce projet remet en cause la notion de longue date inspirée par Habermas selon laquelle il y aurait quelque manque de clarté dans la manière dont les critiques métaphysiques et méthodologiques d’Adorno se relient avec ses soucis sociaux et politiques—plus spécifiquement son désir de s’occuper de la souffrance réelle. Par ailleurs, cette étude contribue à l’intérêt en plein essor au marxisme d’Adorno, montrant que c’est dans ses engagements avec Marx qu’Adorno voit l’importance réelle et matérielle de sa critique de la métaphysique et de l’ontologie, ainsi que la possibilité de résister aux forces de la domination sociale.
... groups objects together through a set of abstract elements, but ... also attributes these abstract elements to objects as their very ... 22 ...
7. Semiotics: 2008
Alisa Zhila Basic Semiotic Concepts Explication in Species of Structures for Their Further Formal Systematization with Advantages of Extensional Approach
... are assumed to be primary against abstract objects, an individual (a subject ... of unchangeable images of objects (d1.i) and abstract images ... group. • abstract objects are assumed to be secondary to material ...
8. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 74 > Issue: 1
Anthony Everett Pretense, Existence, and Fictional Objects
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There has recently been considerable interest in accounts of fiction which treat fictional characters as abstract objects. In this paper I argue against this view. More precisely I argue that such accounts are unable to accommodate our intuitions that fictional negative existentials such as “Raskolnikov doesn’t exist” are true. I offer a general argument to this effect and then consider, but reject, some of the accounts of fictional negative existentials offered by abstract object theorists. I then note that some of the sort of data invoked by the abstract object theorist in fact cuts against her position. I concludle that we should not regard fictional characters as abstract objects but rather should adopt a make-believe theoretic account of fictional characters along the lines of those developed by Ken Walton and others.
... treat fictional characters as abstract objects. In this paper I argue against this ... fictional characters as abstract objects but rather should adopt a make ... interest in accounts of fiction which treat fictional characters as abstract objects ...
9. The Southern Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 24 > Issue: 4
Daniel E. Flage Hume on Denotation and Connotation
... indeterminate sensible qualities of objects (abstract general ideas), and, consequently, a ... abstract idea, i.e., an idea that can represent all objects of a certain kind and that ... abstract idea, my determinate idea ofthecup will allow me to classify other objects as ...
10. The New Scholasticism: Volume > 63 > Issue: 3
Brian Leftow Anselm on Omnipresence
... suggest also that God’s omnipresence is abstract-entity-like (its how) and that for ... that the world is God’s body. Wierenga may be aware of this problem, for he objects ... support (N), via (N)’s role in Monologion 14 and 20–22, the presence of cause to ...
11. The Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 92 > Issue: 12
Index to Volume XCII
... JOURNAL Abstract Objects Lowe, E. J.: The ... Metaphysics of Abstract Objects. 92 (10): 509 ... -55'95 Lowe, E. J.: The Metaphysics of Abstract Objects. 92 (10): 509 ...
12. Études Phénoménologiques: Volume > 14 > Issue: 27/28
John J. Drummond From Intentionality to Intensionality and Back
... ontological status of (abstract) idealities which are the objects of intention ... Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1977), 22-32; and Husserl and Frege (Bloomington: Indiana ... : Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1990), especially chaps. 4-8; "An Abstract ...
13. The Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 40 > Issue: 5
Willard V. Quine Notes on Existence and Necessity
... abstract objects, or universals, is partly prompted by an idea that ... there are abstract objects, numbers, such as 9 and 9®'. It is not ... admitting, in addition to abstract objects and in addition to the ...
14. The Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 120 > Issue: 2
Owen Griffiths, Orcid-ID A. C. Paseau Ways of Being and Logicality
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Ontological monists hold that there is only one way of being, while ontological pluralists hold that there are many; for example, concrete objects like tables and chairs exist in a different way from abstract objects like numbers and sets. Correspondingly, the monist will want the familiar existential quantifier as a primitive logical constant, whereas the pluralist will want distinct ones, such as for abstract and concrete existence. In this paper, we consider how the debate between the monist and pluralist relates to the standard test for logicality. We deploy this test and show that it favors the monist.
... exist in a different way from abstract objects like numbers and sets ... a predicate. So when the pluralist says that abstract objects exist, they ... ��� ������� �� ���������� consisting only of abstract or of concrete objects, respectively. In the ...
15. Philosophia Christi: Volume > 23 > Issue: 1
Steven B. Cowan Orcid-ID Or Abstractum: Idealism and Abstract Objects
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George Berkeley is famous for the metaphysical principle esse is percipi or percipere (“to be is to be perceived or to be a perceiver”). Many Berkeleyan idealists take this principle to be incompatible with Platonic realism about abstract objects, and thus opt either for nominalism or divine conceptualism on which they are construed as divine ideas. In this paper, I argue that Berkeleyan idealism is consistent with a Platonic realism in which abstracta exist outside the divine mind. This allows the Berkeleyan to expand Berkeley’s principle to read: esse is percipi or percipere or abstractum.
...Idealism and Abstract Objects ... take this principle to be incompatible with Platonic realism about abstract objects ... Or Abstractum Idealism and Abstract Objects ...
16. Canadian Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 40 > Issue: 2
Gualtiero Piccinini, Sam Scott Recovering What Is Said With Empty Names
... refer to Meinongian non-existent objects. Nor is there reason to ... sentences. Reimer objects as follows: The problem ...
17. The Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 68 > Issue: 24
Index to Volume LXVIII
... Given. 839(22). Some Remarks on Logical Form [abstract ... (21). Adverbs, APA Symposium. 690(20). Adverbs (Logic and —) [abstract ... of —). MICHAEL A. SLOTE. 821(22). Algorithmic ...
18. The Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 95 > Issue: 12
Kit Fine Cantorian Abstraction: A Reconstruction and Defense
.... This then makes it natural to suppose that when we abstract from objects we go ... will not be conventional symbols for their values, but abstract objects which ... rather than signs. I have so far talked about the abstract theory of variable objects ...
19. The Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 69 > Issue: 23
Index to Volume LXIX
... Objects [abstract], GUIDO KÜNG ... Intentional Objects [abstract]. 677 (19 ... Language" (The —) [abstract]. DALLAS ...
20. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 2 > Issue: 4
Martin Krampen ON THE SEMIOTICS OF POLISH POSTERS
... subcluster (09, 28, 22, 43, 37) is united by the comments "abstract; buildings, objects ... subcluster (15, 22, 41) has the comments: "abstract, syrrlbolical; simple; color; figure ... the remarks: "abstract; exhibitions; color; buildings, objects, graphics ...