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1. Grazer Philosophische Studien: Volume > 37
Gregory Landini How to Russell Another Meinongian: A Russellian Theory of Fictional Objects Versus Zalta's Theory of Abstract Objects
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This article compares the theory of Meinongian objects proposed by Edward Zalta with a theory of fiction formulated within an early Russellian framework. The Russellian framework is the second-order intensional logic proposed by Nino B. Cocchiarelly as a reconstruction of the form of Logicism Russell was examining shortly after writing The Principles of Mathematics. A Russellian theory of denoting concepts is developed in this intensional logic and applied as a theory of the "objects' of fiction. The framework retains the Orthodox early Russellian ontology of existents, possible non-existents, and properties and relations in intension. This avoids the assumption, found in Meinongian theories, of impossible and incomplete objects. It also obviates the need to preserve consistency by distinguishing a new "mode of predication", or a "distinction in kinds of predicates". Thus, it is argued that an early Russellian theory forms a powerful rival to a Meinongian theory of objects.
... FICTIONAL OBJECTS VERSUS ZALTA'S THEORY OF ABSTRACT OBJECTS ... Mally's view. Zalta's Abstract Objects (1983) is an important new ... 'squareness'. To assure uniqueness, abstract objects are held to be ...
2. Grazer Philosophische Studien: Volume > 60
Dirk Greimann "No Entity Without Identity":: A Reductionist Dogma?
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Quine has persuasively shown that the empiricist "dogma of reductionism", which is the belief that each meaningfiil statement of science can be reduced to statements about immediate sense experience, must be abandoned. However, Quine's methodology of ontology seems to incorporate an analogous physicalistic dogma according to which the identity conditions of each scientifically respectable sort of abstract objects can be reduced to the identity conditions of physical objects. This paper aims to show that the latter dogma must be abandoned, too. In section 1, the reductionist methodology underlying Quine's prescript "No Entity without Identity" is reconstructed in detail. In section 2 and 3, this methodology is criticized on the ground that Quine's individuation of sets offendsagainst the reductive Criteria of adequacy for individuations that are presupposed by his criticism of the ontological recognition of intensional objects. Finally, in section 4 an alternative holistic conception of individuation is outlined.
... of each scientifically respectable sort of abstract objects can be reduced ... scientifically respectable sort of abstract objects can be reduced to the ... illusion to think that there is any sort of abstract objects whose ...
3. Grazer Philosophische Studien: Volume > 53
Rolf George Bolzano's Programme and Abstract Objects
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Most of the Bolzano literature is exegetical, neglecting, unfortunately, the great potential of his logic as the beginning of a PROGRAMME. Specifically, his unorthodox construai of the consequence relation as triadic, and his account of logical form are promising beginnings which even as they stand shed light on question of relevance, the ancient problems of enthymemes and others. Instead of developing these suggestions, Bolzano scholars have been occupied with elucidating the ontology of sentences in themselves, and related topics. I argue, and believe to be in agreement with Bolzano, that the nature of sentences is fully explained by the relations that hold between them, just as money has no nature or essence beyond the transactions it makes possible. It follows that the development of his logic would contribute at least as much to the understanding of sentences than any exegesis.
...Bolzano's Programme and Abstract Objects ... BOLZANO'S PROGRAMME AND ABSTRACT OBJECTS Rolf GEORGE ... , it will turn out, are abstract objects of an odd sort: they ...
4. Grazer Philosophische Studien: Volume > 25/26
Edward N. Zalta Lambert, Mally and the Principle of Independence
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In a recent book, K. Lambert argues that philosophers should adopt Mally's Principle of Independence (the principle that an object can have properties even though it lacks being of any kind) by abandoning a constraint on true predications, namely, that all of the singular terms in a true predication denote objects which have being. The constraint may be abandoned either by supposing there is a true predication in which one of the terms denotes a beingless object (Meinong) or by supposing there is a true predication in which one of the terms denotes nothing at all (free logic). However, Lambert's conclusions can be undermined by showing that the data he produces in support of his position can be explained by either of two recent theories of abstract and nonexistent objects, both of which are couched in languages which conform to the traditional constraint.
... theoretical treatment of the data may be found in my, Abstract Objects ... there was a realm of abstract objects each of which was uniquely ... the properties in the set) (2) Two abstract objects are ...
5. Grazer Philosophische Studien: Volume > 25/26
Rudolf Haller Preface
... of abstract objects, which cannot themselves exist, and the ... being of instantiations or exemplifications of abstract objects ...
6. Grazer Philosophische Studien: Volume > 53
Jan Sebestik Bolzano, Exner and the Origins of Analytical Philosophy
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Analytical philosophy begins with the first mathematical and philosophical works of Bolzano published between 1804 and 1817. There, Bolzano set out a project for the global reform of mathematics by means of the axiomatic method. Having completed the Wissenschaftslehre, Bolzano wrote a summary of his logic for the Größenlehre, which he sent to Exner in 1833. The correspondence between Bolzano and Exner covered some of the main subjects treated by analytical philosophy: the status of abstract objects (propositions and objective ideas), intuitions, objectless ideas, the concept of object and many others. While Bolzano argued in favor of abstract entities independent of mind and of language, Exner considered them as abstractions obtained from the subjective judgments and representations. During the XlXth century, Bolzano's philosophy spread over Bohemia and Austria through manuscripts and through the first edition of Zimmermann's textbook of philosophy. The most important Brentanians, Kerry, Twardowski, Meinong and Husserl, discussed his doctrines which may also have influenced Wittgenstein and the Polish school.
... abstract objects (propositions and objective ideas), intuitions, objectless ideas, the ... declared that even those who do not accept abstract objects such as ... problems: 1) the status of abstract objects: propositions ...
7. Grazer Philosophische Studien: Volume > 48
Alberto Voltolini Ficta versus Possibilia
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Although both belong to the domain of the nonexistent, there is an ontological distinction between ficta and possibilia. Ficta are a particular kind of abstract objects, namely constructed abstract objects which generically depend on authors for their subsistence. Moreover, they are essentially incomplete entities, in that they are correlates of finite sets of properties. - On the other hand, possibilia are concrete objects. Being a possible object is indeed being an entity that might have existed, that is, that might have been involved in the causal order. Besides, as an object existent in this sense may legitimately be qualified as complete, the incompleteness which pertains to possible objects is contingent, in that it regards them only with respect to the possible worlds in which they do not exist. This ontological distinction has a semantic correlate: whereas names for possibilia are full-fledged directly referential terms, names for ficta are synonymous with de facto rigid descriptions of a complex sort.
... distinction between ficta and possibilia. Ficta are a particular kind of abstract objects ... , namely constructed abstract objects which generically depend on authors for their ... particular kind of abstract objects, namely constructed abstract ...
8. Grazer Philosophische Studien: Volume > 51
Frederick Kroon Characterizing Non-existents
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Consider predicates like 'is a fictional character' and 'is a mythical object'. Since their ascription entails a corresponding Negative Existential claim, call these 'NE-characterizing predicates'. Objectualists such as Parsons, Sylvan, van Inwagen, and Zalta think that NE-characterizing properties are genuine properties of genuinely non-existent objects. But how, then, to make room for statements like 'Vulcan is a failed posit' and 'that little green man is a trick of the light'? The predicates involved seem equally NE-characterizing yet on the surface fail to mark a genuine property o f things. Instead, the truth of such predications strongly supervenes on types of referential failure. Kendall Walton's anti-objectualist account of talk about fiction provides a neat solution to this supervenience problem by invoking special games of make-believe. The present paper claims that while Walton's view thereby gains an important advantage over objectualism, the solution faces problems of its own. The rest of the paper desribes another solution, one that assigns a large role to the idea of metaphor.
... women aren't abstract objects),^ and Ken * I am grateful to Ed ... -existents, but genuinely existing abstract objects that have their origins ... kind-specifying property of (abstract) objects. And therein lies ...
9. Grazer Philosophische Studien: Volume > 50
Terence Parsons Meinongian Semantics Generalized
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It is tempting to think that Meinong overlooked the "specific/nonspecific" distinction. For example, 'I am looking for a grey horse' may either mean that there is a specific horse I am looking for (e.g. one I lost), or just that I am grey-horse-seeking. The former reading, and not the latter, requires for its truth that there be a grey horse. The purpose of this paper is to investigate whether it is defensible to maintain Meinong's theory here: to take nonspecific reading of any verb concerning a possibly non-existent but incomplete object. This requires essential appeal to the distinction between nuclear and extranuclear properties. Included is a discussion of criticisms of Meinong's own theory, and of the Medieval theory of ampliation, according to which psychological discourse can "ampliate" a term such as 'chimera' so as to stand for one or more things that cannot exist, yet are chimeras. The paper concludes inconclusively.
... abstract objects. The object appealed to is no longer a gold mountain ... , Canberra. Zalta, Edward. 1983. Abstract Objects. D. Reidel, Dordrecht. ... of X. And Ed Zalta's (1983) Meinong-inspired theory of abstract ...
10. Grazer Philosophische Studien: Volume > 45
Nebojsa Kujundzic Mr. Crusoe is Angry
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The paper examines the reasons for which Camap's and Fodor's theory are considered inadequate by Hilary Putnam in his book Representation and Reality, Putnam deconstmcts his earlier functionalist position and finds himself able to say many things about what language is not and very few about what it is, and, metaphorically speaking, puts human society in an Augustinian position regarding language. As well, this paper investigates whether Putnam's "internal realism" encourages the possible appearence of a new breed of analytic philosophers who will be more sensitive to what was once called "continental metaphysics" and yet who still maintain the conceptual and methodological rigidness of the "old" analytic school.
... languages as entirely abstract objects and identify them by their ... languages as abstract objects already implies "semantic ascent". Yet ...
11. Grazer Philosophische Studien: Volume > 57
Maria Elisabeth Reicher Fiction and Metaphysics
... abstract objects (i. e., they lack spatiotemporal location ... abstract objects that are "discovered" or picked out by the authors of fictional ... that abstract objects can only encode such properties, but never exemplify ...
12. Grazer Philosophische Studien: Volume > 58/59
Arthur Witherall Lewis and Sylvan on Noneism
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In his paper "Noneism or Allism" David Lewis argued that Richard Sylvan's rehabilitation of Meinong's theory of objects was not a noneist one but rather an allist, that is, that all objects whatsoever actually exist and thus Meinong and Sylvan are among the greatest "entity-multipliers". But this is exactly what Sylvan tried to show is not the case. I'll argue that Lewis' attack ultimately fails in re-instating an old serious misinterpretation of Meinongian metaphysics. In doing so he deflects attention away from the substance of Sylvan's position and casts him as the defender of something unintelligible.
... and fiiture things, unactualised possibilia, abstract objects and ...
13. Grazer Philosophische Studien: Volume > 21
Books received
.... Edward N. ZALTA: Abstract Objects, Dordrecht: Reidel 1983, XIII ...
14. Grazer Philosophische Studien: Volume > 44
Peter Simons Who's Afraid of Higher-Order Logic?
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Suppose you hold the following opinions in the philosophy of logic. First-order predicate logic is expressively inadequate to regiment concepts of mathematic and natural language; logicism is plausible and attractive; set theory as an adjunct to logic is unnatural and ontologically extravagant; humanly usable languages are finite in lexicon and syntax; it is worth striving for a Tarskian semantics for mathematics; there are no Platonic abstract objects. Then you are probably already in cognitive distress. One way to decease your unhappiness, short for embracing Platonism, is to accept higher-order logic and look, as did Arthur Prior, for a plausible way to neutralize the ontological commitment to abstract entities that this acceptance appears to entail.
... mathematics; there are no Platonic abstract objects. Then you are probably already in ... ANTIPLATonism: There are no abstract objects in the sense of Platonism ...
15. Grazer Philosophische Studien: Volume > 25/26
Roderick M. Chisholm On the Positive and Negative States of Things
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Following Bolzano, I suggest that there are two types of entity: those that are states of other things and those that are not. The second type includes, not only substances, in the traditional sense, but also such abstract objects as numbers, attributes and propositions. It is argued that the theory of states, when combined with an intentional account of negative attributes, will yield a theory of negative entities and of events.
... substances, in the traditional sense, but also such abstract objects as numbers ... abstract objects and therefore noncontingent things. But the states of ...
16. Grazer Philosophische Studien: Volume > 39
Eric P. James Realism, Mathematics and Modality
...) Hale, B. (1987) - Abstract Objects (Blackwell) Hale, B. (1990 ... mathematical statements seem to commit us to an ontology of abstract ... objects which are not accessible according to our currentiy ...
17. Grazer Philosophische Studien: Volume > 58/59
Maria Elisabeth Reicher What Is It To Compose a Musical Work
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The paper deals with the question whether musical works are created or discovered. In the preliminaries some ontological presuppositions concerning the nature of a musical work setting the stage for the whole debate and the Creationist and Platonist views are discussed. The psychological concepts of creation and discovery are distinguished from their ontological counterparts and it turns out that only the ontological ones are relevant in this context and that the Creationist arguments fail to prove the point in question. Finally it is argued that there is not necessaryly a conflict between the positions of the creationist and the Platonist, if they are construed in an appropriate way. The Creationist view that to compose is to create and the Platonist that to compose is to discover are compatible, at least if creation is understood in a quite natural and common sense way.
... Objects (New Haven 1980), and Edward N. ZdXidi, Abstract Objects. An ... there is the domain of abstract objects such as properties, propositions ...
18. Grazer Philosophische Studien: Volume > 60
Gregg A. Ten Elshof A Defense of Moderate Haecceitism
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The identity of indiscernibles is false. Robert Adams and others have argued that if the identity of indiscernibles is false, then primitive thisness must be admitted as a fundamental feature of the world (i.e. haecceitism is true). Moreover, it has been suggested that if haecceitism is true, then essentialism is false - that accounting for individuation by means of haecceities precludes a thing's having essential qualitative properties. I will argue that this suggestion is misguided. In so doing, I will be defending what Adams has labeled 'moderate haecceitism'.After working through some preliminary issues, I will attempt (in section I) to motivate haecceitism. I will begin by reviewing Adams' arguments against the doctrine of the identity of indiscernibles. Next, I will examine altemative accounts of individuation which concede the falsity of that doctrine. I will reject these accounts and conclude that primitive thisness has an essential role to play in any satisfying account of individuation. In section II , I will surface the alleged tension between haecceitism and essentialism. In section III , I will suggest that Adams' moderate haecceitism avoids the tension surfaced in section II. Finally, in section IV, I will raise a difficulty for Adams' view and suggest a different understanding of the nature of haecceities. I will argue that the alleged tension between haecceitism and essentialism rests on a conflation of the metaphysical problem of individuation either with the epistemological problem which goes by the same name or with problems involving the unity of a thing. I will conclude with a few brief comments about the significance of moderate haecceitism for modal epistemology.
...-330. 69 thisnesses, they obtain as abstract objects in worlds where ... abstract objects existing even at worlds where they fail to be ... may be actually existing, abstract objects (e.g. universals). Miller's project ...
19. Grazer Philosophische Studien: Volume > 36
Eingesandte Bücher Books received
... Press, 1989, viii + 394 pp. B. HALE: Abstract Objects. Oxford ...
20. Grazer Philosophische Studien: Volume > 7/8
Alvin Plantinga De Essentia
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In this paper I propose an amendment to Chisholm's definition of individual essence. I then argue that a thing has more than one individual essence and that there is no reason to believe no one grasps anyone else's essence. The remainder of the paper is devoted to a refutation of existentialism, the view that the essence of an object X (along with propositions and states of affairs directly about x) is ontologically dependent upon x in the sense that it could not have existed if x had not existed.
...'t only abstract objects, furthermore, that have essences. An easy w ... abstract objects are necessary beings; sets with contingent members ... abstract objects are necessary beings. Still, what about (9)? Granted ...