Common sense may say that “Substance is Just a Word” is a deepity. I want to argue it is not: that in a substantial sense (pun intended), substance is just a word. — Art48
All words mean something and may be useful.
A word can refer to an objective reality (ex, water) or not (ex. unicorn).
The OP discusses if "substance" refers to an objective reality of not. — Art48
The OP discusses if "substance" refers to an objective reality of not. — Art48
Substance is the thing which has properties. — Art48
If you mentally delete all the properties, what remains? — Art48
The difference is substance, which is what the real apple possesses and the imaginary apple does not. — Art48
For 17th century philosophers, the term is reserved for the ultimate constituents of reality on which everything else depends. This article discusses the most important theories of substance from the 17th century: those of Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz. Although these philosophers were highly original thinkers, they shared a basic conception of substance inherited from the scholastic-Aristotelian tradition from which philosophical thinking was emerging. In a general sense each of these theories is a way of working out dual commitments: a commitment to substance as an ultimate subject and a commitment to the existence of God as a substance.
Common sense may say that “Substance is Just a Word” is a deepity. I want to argue it is not: that in a substantial sense (pun intended), substance is just a word. — Art48
If nothing is left, then substance is indeed just a word, a word that refers to nothing in the real world. “Substance” becomes a linguistic shorthand for a set of properties: red, sweet, of a certain shape, mass, etc. Therefore, it’s a word, no more. — Art48
So, the difference is in the mode of existence of both apple’s properties, not in some imaginary substance which one apple possesses and the other does not. — Art48
The OP seems confused — Janus
It looks that way to me. — Fooloso4
One reason I like to post here is to see criticism of what I think. — Art48
So, substance is a theoretical construct; it's something we assume to exist as the bearer of properties. But we don't directly experience substance.
Of course, we don't directly experience protons, quarks, etc. either so maybe the phrase "just a word" is unjustified. — Art48
So, substance is a theoretical construct; it's something we assume to exist as the bearer of properties. But we don't directly experience substance. — Art48
The difference between the real apple and the imaginary apple is that the properties of the real apple really exist: we can see its redness, feel its mass. The properties of the imaginary apple exist only in our mind. — Art48
I agree, I think, and I'll come at it a different way, by specific example. Materialism (and in one usage physicalism) is a monism where there is only one substance,matter (the physical). This substance makes up an expanding set of 'things' that include stones and water and trees, but also gravitational fields, massless particles, particles in superposition, anti-particles, particles moving backwards in time, dark matter and dark energy, often consciousness/awareness is considered material or a facet of the material and likely anything that ever becomes considered real.Common sense may say that “Substance is Just a Word” is a deepity. I want to argue it is not: that in a substantial sense (pun intended), substance is just a word. — Art48
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