It would be a collection of parts without any parts. — Metaphysician Undercover
The appeal to fundamental particles does not help you because they are obviously not known as concrete entities. — Metaphysician Undercover
But "same" is the relationship which a thing has with itself. — Metaphysician Undercover
So if two distinct things are "the same" with respect to being red, then the concept of "red" cannot be a resemblance relation, which is a relationship of similarity — Metaphysician Undercover
If it is the case, that "A universal circle looks more like a recipe how to create all possible circles", then I do not see why you want to describe this as a resemblance relation. — Metaphysician Undercover
In short resemblance and universal are the same thing or, more accurately, they don't seem to be different enough to justify the kind of distinction the OP wishes to make. — Agent Smith
An empty collection is a collection of no parts. A non-composite object. — litewave
They are particulars located in space and time. — litewave
Because the recipe describes relations between particular circles, like translation, rotation, scaling. — litewave
Resemblance comes in various degrees and you can understand sameness as maximum or exact resemblance. So the meaning of resemblance also covers sameness. — litewave
Litewave, a collection is not an object. Therefore an empty collection is not a non-composite object. — Metaphysician Undercover
They have no location, that's the issue with quantum uncertainty. — Metaphysician Undercover
A particular apple is a collection of its parts. Is the apple not an object? What is an object then? — litewave
The title of my OP is asking whether there is such a distinction. — litewave
An object is much more than a collection of parts. Each different object has its parts ordered in a particular way. — Metaphysician Undercover
Does my comment not address your question adequately? If no, why? — Agent Smith
In set theory, ordered sets/collections (which have members arranged in a particular order) can be defined out of unordered sets. — litewave
An "unordered set", a group of things which have no order, is really an incoherent fiction, an impossible situation, because things must have position. — Metaphysician Undercover
In reality, you have shown that you construct a representation of a particular, an object, from some preconceived universals, set theory, but then you've tried to claim that universals are derived from particulars. — Metaphysician Undercover
the conception of universals is prior to the apprehension of particulars. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, I am saying that particular collections are made up of particular collections, not constructed from universals. I take particular collections as granted because I see them all around me and because for any particulars there necesarily seems to be a collection of them, and universals don't seem necessary to explain the existence of particulars. — litewave
For most people, for most concepts, acquaintance with instances of the concept precede, in time, the possession of the concept, and exposure to those particulars is instrumental in acquiring the universal they fall under. That's the argument from ontogeny: you are acquainted with moving, barking, licking particulars before you know that they are dogs. And there is a related argument from phylogeny: modern humans have a great many concepts that they were taught, often through the use of exemplars, but it stands to reason that not every human being was taught: there must have been at least one person who passed from not having to having a concept unaided. In essence, we imagine that person somehow teaching themselves a concept through the use of exemplars, and we imagine that process proceeding as we do when analyzing a population of objects, looking for commonalities. — Srap Tasmaner
hat's of interest here is that resemblance is not only relative, but comparative: resemblance is a three-way relation, a given object resembles another more, or less, than it resembles a third. — Srap Tasmaner
You claim to see collections existing as particulars all around you. Please explain to me how you think that you are seeing a collection as a particular when you haven't even said what a particular is. — Metaphysician Undercover
Your comment said that my OP wishes to make a distinction between a universal and a resemblance relation when I in fact question that such a distinction exists — litewave
Too theoretical and insubstantial. Please give examples. — Alkis Piskas
Well, that's nice and inspiring, yet it is still too theoretical. I mean, not quite tanglible. I, personally, cannot even imagine how it would look like.For example, what is a universal circle? It doesn't look like a particular circle because every particular circle is continuous in space and around a particular point in space but a universal circle is not supposed to be located in any continuous area of space. A universal circle looks like certain deviations from any particular circle and thus more like a resemblance relation among particular circles. — litewave
A universal is supposed to be a general property that is somehow instantiated/exemplified in particular objects (instances/examples) that have this property, which coincides with a particular resemblance relation among these particular objects. For example, redness as a universal is instantiated in particular red objects, which coincides with a particular resemblance relation among all red objects: they all resemble each other in the sense that they are all red. — litewave
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