Are concrete objects in some sense made up of the properties they exemplify? A distinguished tradition holds they are. I begin by defending the distinction: there is a real and not just semantic distinction between asserting and denying that concrete objects have their properties as parts. I then argue in favor of the view that concrete objects are not made up of their parts. First, this view has less ontological baggage than its opponent. Next, the supposed advantages of the alternative view—its superiority in understanding persistence, exemplification, or the possibility of diverse duplicates—dissipate under analysis
The Special Composition Question asks for the jointly necessary and sufficient conditions for some m...
In this paper, I defend an indexical analysis of the abstract-concrete distinction within the framew...
One of the central questions of material-object metaphysics is which highly visible objects there ar...
Are concrete objects in some sense made up of the properties they exemplify? A distinguished traditi...
We are accustomed to thinking that a primrose is "concrete" and a prime number is "abstract," that "...
What are the ordinary objects we sense? More precisely, how do we characterize the nature of their e...
ABSTRACT. In this paper, I examine a puzzle that emerges from what J. P. Moreland has called the tra...
In this paper, I argue that for the purposes of ordinary reasoning, sentences about properties of co...
Throughout the history of philosophy, philosophers have explained the nature of those ordinary objec...
The Abstract/Concrete Distinction 3 This study presents original evidence that abstract and concre...
Concreteness has been defined as a semantic property related to physical perception. In this paper w...
Abstract: If you think that there are concrete particulars and that concrete particulars have a comp...
An object is a simple if and only if it has no proper parts. An object is gunk if and only if every ...
This paper explores the consequences of the two most prominent forms of contemporary structural real...
Concrete particular objects (e.g., living organisms) figure saliently in our everyday experience as ...
The Special Composition Question asks for the jointly necessary and sufficient conditions for some m...
In this paper, I defend an indexical analysis of the abstract-concrete distinction within the framew...
One of the central questions of material-object metaphysics is which highly visible objects there ar...
Are concrete objects in some sense made up of the properties they exemplify? A distinguished traditi...
We are accustomed to thinking that a primrose is "concrete" and a prime number is "abstract," that "...
What are the ordinary objects we sense? More precisely, how do we characterize the nature of their e...
ABSTRACT. In this paper, I examine a puzzle that emerges from what J. P. Moreland has called the tra...
In this paper, I argue that for the purposes of ordinary reasoning, sentences about properties of co...
Throughout the history of philosophy, philosophers have explained the nature of those ordinary objec...
The Abstract/Concrete Distinction 3 This study presents original evidence that abstract and concre...
Concreteness has been defined as a semantic property related to physical perception. In this paper w...
Abstract: If you think that there are concrete particulars and that concrete particulars have a comp...
An object is a simple if and only if it has no proper parts. An object is gunk if and only if every ...
This paper explores the consequences of the two most prominent forms of contemporary structural real...
Concrete particular objects (e.g., living organisms) figure saliently in our everyday experience as ...
The Special Composition Question asks for the jointly necessary and sufficient conditions for some m...
In this paper, I defend an indexical analysis of the abstract-concrete distinction within the framew...
One of the central questions of material-object metaphysics is which highly visible objects there ar...