We know from Kripke and friends that essences are logical rubbish.
So it is reasonable to reject the idea that it is an essence or soul that is reincarnated. Hence one can reject ↪Metaphysician Undercover — Banno
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It's hardly unusual, improper or inappropriate to give a name to a proposal. ...by which to refer to it. — Michael Ossipoff
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.Except when you take some recognizable terminology and use it in an entirely idiosyncratic way
.Except when you take some recognizable terminology and use it in an entirely idiosyncratic way, which makes you a self-appointed expert
.…in a school which has a single member.
And since the living body is a property, there must be something (a soul) which has that property. — Metaphysician Undercover
I’m sorry, Wayfarer, but you’ve demonstrated an inability to meet the above qualifications, and I henceforth won’t have time to reply to you. — Michael Ossipoff
What I said is that we can infer from logical demonstrations, that when there is a living body, there must be something which has that body, and this is what we call the soul. — Metaphysician Undercover
We know from Kripke and friends that essences are logical rubbish. — Banno
Rigid Designation and Essentialism
Throughout Kripke's discussion of names in lecture 1 of Naming and Necessity he takes it for granted that the distinction between essential properties of an object and its contingent properties is a legitimate one. — Soames 2003
To Aquinas, “pure” essence (form without matter) is, by definition, not found in the realm of material existence. That is, existence is always a partner with essence such that “to be” within existence requires both matter and form. So “pure” form cannot be fully known or expressed by any existing being, but is only generated and fully known in the immaterial mind of God. Put bluntly, “pure” essence does not exist. But then, pure existence (matter without form) cannot concretely “be” either. So there can “be” no concrete actualization of any “thing” without intellective form, and there can be no merely factual concretion without any ordered and coherent structure to make matter (which is always already formed in some manner) into some particular thing.
Essence: the intrinsic nature or indispensable quality of something, especially something abstract, that determines its character.
"conflict is the essence of drama"
synonyms: quintessence, soul, spirit, nature; More
PHILOSOPHY
a property or group of properties of something without which it would not exist or be what it is.
plural noun: essences
Kripke shows that any properties, including those that are called essential, can be removed from an individual, and yet that individual remains. T
Identity is not memory. Loose all your memories - and it is still Rich who can't remember. — Banno
When Michael Thomas Boatwright, 61, was found unconscious in a Palm Springs, California, motel on February 28, no one would have ever expected what happened next. As Michael awoke in the emergency department of Desert Regional Medical Center, he claimed his name was Johan Ek and that he spoke only Swedish, he failed to recognize his son, and most important, he couldn’t even recognized himself. A baffling mystery of forgotten identity, Boatwright continues to stump the medical community and surprise the world with each new discovery.
he sees essences and essential properties as things you can't remove and still remain essential. — Thanatos Sand
Kripke shows that any properties, including those that are called essential, can be removed from an individual, and yet that individual remains. T — Banno
Because that seems to me to be an error. — Banno
Nixon comes already individuated at the beginning of the story. The causal chain might account for the use of a certain name, but for how parents distinguish their baby from a lamp?Kripke transcendes these views by showing that individuation is about names - rigid designators.
HE proposes a causal theory for names, and hence for individuation. — Banno
My view is slightly different, in that I view naming as something we do; we use names to pick out individuals. — Banno
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