Try Categories i, 2: "By being 'present in a subject' I do not mean present as parts are present in a whole, but being incapable of existence apart from the said subject [italics mine]." It is clear from the context that he is speaking of accidents as present in a subject. — Dfpolis
how is that about substances and whether they're separable from properties? — Terrapin Station
Because in this translation "subject" and "substance" mean the same thing. A substance is what other things (including accidents) are predicated of. — Dfpolis
There's no phenomenon of self. — Terrapin Station
Accidents are properties. If properties are "other things" then substances are not necessarily properties. — Terrapin Station
Still substances are not properties. — Dfpolis
By the way, not that there are any real accidental versus essential properties. That's confusing how someone thinks about things --specifically, with respect to the concepts they've constructed --with the world independent of us. — Terrapin Station
Still substances are not properties. — Dfpolis
Which means they're separable=they're not identical, but this is wrong. — Terrapin Station
No, 'Separable' means that they could have an independent being, — Dfpolis
This depends on how you define "essential." Aristotle is clear that by "essential" in this regard, he is speaking of species-defining properties. — Dfpolis
However the self is still there — bert1
Now you're telling me what I'm referring to. I'm referring to being logically separable. The idea of substances sans properties is incoherent. That's the whole point (that I already made). — Terrapin Station
I was referring to "mentally, not ontologically separable." Is that not Aristotle's idea? You just said it was.That is not Aristotle's idea, but yours. — Dfpolis
There's no sense in which essential versus accidental properties are objective/extramental. — Terrapin Station
and the whole remains the same kind of thing (fits the same definition). — Dfpolis
That is not Aristotle's idea, but yours. — Dfpolis
I was referring to "mentally, not ontologically separable — Terrapin Station
we see open possibilities being closed by experience. — Dfpolis
So you're saying that Aristotle is doing ontology "The whole remains..." by analyzing language. Which is something I said above that you disagreed with. — Terrapin Station
And I was referring to the notion of substance sans properties. — Dfpolis
I did not say "the whole remains," you did. — Dfpolis
That was the point. In order to get to "the self is still there" we need to do something theoretical — Terrapin Station
That's one way to get to the self, yes, to infer it. But I think we can also do it, as it were, reflexively. — bert1
knowledge is the reception and processing of intelligible information — Mww
Physical possibility: always derived from experience — Mww
Each part of the matter of reality is existentially independent, even if not necessarily ontologically independent. — Mww
Logical possibility is thought, physical possibility is experience — Mww
everything must relate to how a human understands it. — Mww
Parsimony dictates, therefore, that the form reside internally and it be that to which the impressions on our perception relate. — Mww
all the same in kind as Aristotle’s forms, except for their location. — Mww
I can easily know a presence and surmise there to be a content in it, without knowing what the content is. — Mww
And I was referring to the notion of substance sans properties. Aristotle never speaks of it. — Dfpolis
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.