I then cited my dictionary and provided a lengthy excerpt from it, confirming that "quality," "property," "characteristic," and "attribute" all refer to the same basic concept. I still fail to see how particularity does not qualify. You claim that matter/structures/processes (and everything else) are all particular; in other words, that is what they are "like." I am not trying to aggravate you here; I am honestly not seeing the distinction that you seem to be making. — aletheist
Anything that you can state as a proposition will include predicates, which you acknowledged is a synonym for properties. — aletheist
Oaky, so a few examples: — Terrapin Station
So, just what would you suggest that a "property of particularity" obtains via? — Terrapin Station
I'm not saying that properties have something to do with the grammatical analysis of sentences. — Terrapin Station
The property of particularity obtains via having no — aletheist
"Having no" isn't a property that things have, though. It has to be something that's present, not something that's absent. — Terrapin Station
That seems rather arbitrary; having the property not-F is equivalent to lacking the property F. — aletheist
absolutely determinate with respect to every conceivable predicate. — aletheist
is there any positive definition of particularity that you would endorse, or is it strictly a negation of generality on your view? — aletheist
The idea that something has a property that's (a) nonexistent is ridiculous. — Terrapin Station
Well, ontologically, it's strictly another way of saying that something doesn't exist. — Terrapin Station
Re being question-begging, what is the argument and conclusion you have in mind? — Terrapin Station
It sounds like I was right - your reply is that F in this case is not something that you recognize as a real property, so not-F is also something that you do not recognize as a real property. How convenient. — aletheist
Particularity is strictly a way of saying that generality does not exist? There is no other way to explain particularity that does not amount to explicitly denying generality? — aletheist
Your objection is to the designation of particularity as a property that something real possesses, on the basis that it (supposedly) can only be defined as the absence of generality, which you deny to be a property that anything real possesses. — aletheist
First off, F is a variable--it depends on what we're even talking about whether I'd say that it's a real property or not. — Terrapin Station
The denial has to do with (a) empirical evidence--everywhere we look, we can't find any (real) universals of the traditional sort ... — Terrapin Station
... and (b) the fact that the very idea of them is incoherent, as for one it requires real nonphysicals ... — Terrapin Station
... and even aside from that, no one will even suggest how in the world universals are supposed to work (in the sense of how it is, exactly, that particulars "participate" in them to fully instantiate them identically to other particulars). — Terrapin Station
F is generality, not-F is particularity. You reject not-F as a real property because you reject F as a real property. — aletheist
that F is a real property if and only if some real things are F and some real things are not-F. — aletheist
Again, I consider the undeniable fact of ubiquitous predictable regularities to be empirical evidence of real generals; namely, the laws of nature. — aletheist
This just privileges physicalism, which I reject. — aletheist
I have suggested (following Peirce) that a real general is an inexhaustible continuum of potential individuals — aletheist
One simple problem with that is that if a continuum can't be distinguishable, you can't have a plural there--you only have individuals if they're distinguishable. — Terrapin Station
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