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Nominalism is the position in metaphysics
that there exist no universals outside of
the mind. It can be understood as anti-realism
about extramental universals. The problem
of universals is the problem of accounting
for the fact that some things are of the
same type--for example, Fluffy and Kitzler
are both cats--or, to put it another way,
the fact that certain properties are repeatable--such
as: the grass is green, my shirt is green,
Kermit is green, etc... One wants to know
in virtue of what make Fluffy and Kitzler
both cats; in virtue of what makes the grass,
my shirt and Kermit all green. Nominalism denies that there are such things
as universals. The motivation to deny universals
flows from several concerns. First, where
are they? Plato famously held that there
is a realm of abstract forms or universals
apart from the natural world of particulars
we see with our own eyes. Particular real-world
objects merely exemplify or instantiate the
universal up in universal heaven. But where
is universal heaven? Is it outside of space
and time? But nothing is outside of space
and time. And in any case, what is the nature
of the instantiation or exemplification relation?
It seems mysterious. A variety of realists, the moderate realists,
hold that there is no heaven in which universals
live, but rather universals are located in
space and time wherever they are manifest.
Now, recall that a universal, like greenness,
is supposed to be a single thing. Nominalists
find it weird that there could be a single
thing that exists in a bunch of places all
at once. The realist maintains that all the
instances of greenness are held together
by the exemplification relation, but, again,
this relation seems mysterious. There are various forms of nominalism ranging
from extreme to almost-realist. On the extreme
end is "predicate" nominalism.
Fluffy and Kitzler are both cats simply in
virtue of the fact that the predicate 'cat'
applies to both of them. That's all there
is to it. However, the realist will object
in frustration that we haven't been told
in virtue of what the predicate applies. The resemblance nominalist will reply that
'cat' applies to both cats in virtue of either
the fact that Fluffy and Kitzler resemble
an exemplar cat closely enough to be classed
together with it as members of its kind,
or that they differ from each other (and
other cats)quite less than they differ from
other things, and this warrants classing
them together. Some resemblance nominalists
will concede that the resemblance relation
is itself a universal, but is the only universal
you need. This betrays the spirit of nominalism.
Others argue that each resemblance relation
is a particular, and is a resemblance relation
simply in virtue of its resemblance to other
resemblance relations. This generates an
infinite regress, but many agree that it
is not vicious. One way to be a nominalist without being an "ostrich nominalist" like the predicate nominalists ("ostrich" because they seem to simply stick their heads in the sand and pretend there isn't a problem--the phrase is D. M. Armstrong's) is to build a theory of resemblance nominalism on a theory of tropes. A trope is a particular instance of a property, like the specific greenness of this here shirt, or the singular coyness of Gwyneth's smile. One might argue that there is a primitive, objective resemblance relation that holds among like tropes. But that seems arbitrary. Another route is to argue that all apparent tropes are constructed out of more primitive tropes and that the most primitive tropes are the entities of complete physics. Primitive trope resemblance may thus be accounted for in terms of causal indiscernibility. Two tropes are exactly resembling if switching them would make no difference to the events in which they are taking part. Varying degrees of resemblance at the macro level can be explained by varying degrees of resemblance at the micro level, and micro-level resemblance is explained in terms of something no less robustly physical than causal power. Armstrong, perhaps the most prominent contemporary realist, argues that such a trope-based variant of nominalism has promise, but holds that it is unable to account for the laws of nature in the way his theory of universals can .
Problem of universals
The problem and constraints on its solution
In giving a more detailed exposition of the
problem, we could do far worse than to begin
by asking, "What are universals supposed
to be, really?" What are they in general?
Given the above gloss, we are asking: "What
sort of beings are types, properties, and
relations, or what are they supposed to be?"
One might well compare this question to the
central question of what might be called
problem of substance: what are objects, anyway?
As far as ontology goes, we have no other
way to describe objects than by their relations
to their properties and relations. If we
try to determine what is meant by the question
"What are objects?", ultimately
we interpret that question as asking, "What
are objects in relation to their properties
and relations?"
In the same way, when we ask what universals
are, we ask: "What are universals--abstract
properties, relations, and types--in relation
to particular objects?" So one might
well regard the problem of universals as
complementary to the problem of substance.
The problem of substance has one trying to
explain what objects, or substances, are
in relation to universals (properties and
relations); the problem of universals has
one trying to explain what universals (properties
and relations) are in relation to objects.
Why is this a problem? Three facts about
universals, or constraints on how we think
about what universals are supposed to be,
will help to see what the problem is. Philosophers
should be able to agree (if these constraints
have been correctly stated) that, no matter
what our theory of universals is, if universals
really are said to exist, then our theory
about universals have at least to be consistent
with, and even to explain, these facts. In
other words, we can (if they are correctly
stated) take these three facts as background
assumptions. Definitely we have to have some
background assumptions, or else we would
not have any tools to evaluate any theory
of universals.
So here are the three constraints.
First constraint: universals can be multiply
instantiated. Universals (if they exist)
are (or can be) multiply instantiated. In
other words, universals are supposed to be
able to have potentially many instances;
if a universal has an instance, then we say
it is instantiated. For example: the type
horse is instantiated by all the horses in
the world. (It is a matter of considerable
dispute among realists, whether uninstantiated
universals exist, e. g., there might be a
dispute whether the universal, flying horse,
exists in spite of the fact that there are
no flying horses.) So universals, whatever
else we think about them, have to be the
sorts of beings that can be multiply instantiated.
A theory of universals has to make sense
of the assumption that universals are supposed
to be multiply instantiatable.
Second constraint: universals are abstract.
Universals are supposed to be abstract. So,
if we can form concepts of universals, then
when we do, we form a concept of something
abstract. In other words, when we think of,
to change our example, dryness, we are thinking
of something abstract. Of course, when we
conceive of dryness, we might imagine a particular
dry thing, like the Sahara Desert. But even
though we imagine it, we understand that
the Sahara Desert is not dryness itself.
It is just an instance of dryness. Whenever
we have an example of a universal in mind,
we know very well that the example is not
the same thing as the universal itself; the
Sahara is not dryness itself.
Third constraint: universals are the referents
of general terms. This is perhaps a very
important constraint, because a very important
argument infers the existence of universals
from the observation that general terms seem
to refer to something multiply instantiated
and abstract. The general term 'red' (or
'redness'), for example, does not refer just
to a particular red apple. Rather, if abstract
properties exist, then the word 'redness'
refers to an abstract property, not just
one instance, because after all there are
other instances of redness besides this apple.
So if, according to a theory about universals,
general terms do not refer to universals,
then that theory should also hold that universals
do not exist. According to this third constraint,
any theory that holds that universals really
do exist had better have a way for general
terms to refer to universals.
There might be other constraints we might
want to put on theories of universals, but
these three are very common and uncontroversial.
With these constraints in mind, we can present
the problem of universals as follows, a different
way that, hopefully, will make it more obvious
how it is supposed to be a problem:
Are there any seemingly curious beings that
can be multiply instantiated, which are abstract
(and which we conceive of when we conceive
of abstract attributes of things), and to
which general terms refer? If so, can we
give any more general account of what these
things are? In other words, can we give any
sort of general account of what universals
are, in their relation to objects, such that
these three constraints about universals
come out to be true?
Platonic realism See Platonic realism. Some
text from the latter article will probably
have to be copied to back this page in order
to ensure some flow to this article.
Aristotle's theory of universals Aristotle
also had a realist theory of universals,
but it differed significantly in several
points. See Aristotle's theory of universals.
Nominalism Well, the people who oppose both
Plato's theory and Aristotle's theory tend
to be rather hard-headed, intellectually
speaking. They don't like all this spooky
talk of "forms," which exist in
some never-never land apart from space and
time. They don't even like this talk of qualities
that can exist in many different things at
once, as Aristotle has it. These people would
prefer if we just talked about particular
things, thank you very much, because that's
all there are -- particular things.
This view has a name: nominalism. So nominalism
is the view that universals don't exist.
No abstract properties, relations, or types
exist! That's what they say. Since nominalists
deny that universals exist, they don't have
to worry about explaining those facts about
universals that I listed. But that doesn't
mean that nominalists still have nothing
to explain. Because, clearly, they have lots
of explaining to do. Their position is really
very strange! I mean, consider this little
argument: We do say, correctly, that this
apple, lots of roses, and many sportscars
are all "red"; so there is a property
they have in common, namely redness; therefore
there is a property; properties are universals,
so universals exist.
How do nominalists reply to that sort of
argument? Whatever they say, they sure as
heck do not want to admit that anything universal
exists; everything that exists, they say,
is located in space and time. So we'll just
have to see if the nominalists have anything
to say in reply to that argument. Now, the
word "nominalism" comes from from
nominalis, which means, in Latin, "pertaining
to names." The first nominalists said
that only general terms or names exist --
no general qualities exist for those terms
to refer to. Just the names. So we can say
the name "redness" exists, but
there is no universal, redness, to which
it refers. What does the term "redness"
refer to, then? Perhaps any particular red
thing, and perhaps the collection of all
the red things. This is called extreme nominalism:
the view that universals do not exist, and
that general terms (such as "humanity"
and "redness") stand for either
particular objects or collections of particular
objects (such as "all humans" and
"all red things").
Now if you? re a very worldly sort of person,
who wants to say that whatever exists, can
only exist in space and time surrounding
us here and now, then nominalism might appeal
to you.
But nominalism definitely has some problems;
I'll explain two of them. So here's the first
problem. If a universal is just a name, then
all that the three humans, John, Mary, and
Sally have in common, is that they are called
"humans." There is no property,
humanity, that they have in common. That
seems very hard to accept! After all, we
need only ask: why are they all called humans?
We don't just say that John, Mary, and Sally
are all humans for no reason at all: we say
so for some reason, don't we? But it is because
each of them is an instance of the type,
humanity, so you might say. Or maybe you
would want to say: each of them is called
"human" because each is a rational
animal. But at any rate, they each appear
to have some properties in common that make
them all human! For example: they all have
highly-developed minds; they walk on two
legs; they talk; and so on. It certainly
does look like there are some properties
that John, Mary, and Sally have in common
-- which are what we call universals. And
their having these properties in common is
explains why they are all called "humans."
The point is that any nominalist worth his
salt is going to have to come up with some
way of answering the following: why is it
that things that are described by the same
general term appear to have many properties
in common, even though in fact (as the nominalist
says), they don't have any properties in
common? I'm not saying that extreme nominalists
haven't tried to solve this problem, because
indeed that have tried. I'm just saying it's
a very hard problem for them to solve.
Let's move on to a second problem for extreme
nominalism. According to extreme nominalism,
general terms refer only to particular objects
or collections of them, right? That's what
I said anyway. But surely when we talk about,
for example, the redness of the apple, we
don't mean the apple itself, but instead
a property of the apple, namely its redness.
Suppose extreme nominalism denies that that
exists. Then it seems to be denying that
this apple has the particular shade of red
that it obviously has! That just seems insane.
It seems as clear as anything can be, that
this apple has a certain color, which we
call red; after all, we can see the color!
Or to take another example: if I say that
B is between A and C, but I deny that between-ness
exists, then I seem to be saying that B's-being-between-A-and-C
doesn't exist; because that would be an instance
of between-ness. So it would seem we should
reject extreme nominalism because it denies
that instances of properties and relations
can exist, when it is as obvious as anything
that at least instances of properties and
relations exist! Even if we can't see or
otherwise experience abstract, or general
properties, surely at least we can experience
instances of them; and it's pretty hard to
deny the existence of something that appears
to be staring you in the face!
So now let's look at two less extreme examples
of nominalism. We won't spend too much time
on these two theories. Now these two theories
both deny that universals exist, which is
why they are versions of nominalism. But
instead of saying that general terms refer
to particulars, or collections of particulars,
they say that general terms refer to something
else -- namely, images, or concepts. So let's
begin with imagism. Imagism is the view that
universals are mental images, pictures in
the mind; or that general terms refer to
such images. So the general term "humanity"
means an image of a human being in my mind.
"Redness" means a mental picture
I have of a patch of red. Now, notice that
there is a distinction between mental images
and concepts. I can have an image of a thing
in mind, but that doesn't mean that I am
conceiving of the type of thing it is: I
can be imagining what a person looks like
without thinking specifically of the concept
of what a person is. The image is different
from the concept. Images generally are different
from concepts. So then here's the second
version of nominalism, called conceptualism:
this is the view that universals are concepts,
or that general terms refer to concepts.
So triangularity itself is a concept -- of
a closed, three-sided figure. The universal,
humanity, is the concept of a rational animal.
To be human, then, is to be an instance of
that concept that you have in your mind.
I think you may see that these are initially
plausible views -- especially conceptualism.
But there are various problems that can be
raised for both imagism and conceptualism,
and there is one objection which I think
we can use to reject both views immediately.
Namely: images and concepts are of something.
So if I have an image of a triangle, or a
concept of triangularity, it is an image
or concept of that. So we cannot identify
images or concepts with what they represent.
What we want to know is the type, or the
property, or the relation, that they represent.
So if I have an image of a triangle in my
head, or if I conceive of triangularity,
and I ask what sort of thing is the universal,
triangularity, then I want to know what sort
of thing this image is an image of, or what
the concept is a concept of. That image or
concept in my mind can't be triangularity,
because the image or concept is supposed
to represent triangularity. So to sum up,
we might have images, or concepts, of universals,
but clearly the universals are different
from any images or concepts we might have
of them.
Nominalism, at least the way I have presented
it to you, would appear to be generally a
very dubious theory, after we consider the
objections to it. Now I'm going to ease our
way into the final theory, which is called
the resemblance theory, and which in my opinion
at least has the best chance of being true.
I'm going to introduce some terminology and
motivate the theory, before I present it.
Remember our second reason for rejecting
extreme nominalism: we said that surely at
least instances of properties and relations
exist! So this redness, this particular redness
of this particular apple, or this instance
of humanity, Mary, exists. Why not then admit
that much, that the instances exist: this
instance of redness, this instance of between-ness,
this instance of humanity. Specific instances
of types, properties, and relations are called
tropes. So tropes are particulars, because
they aren't multiply instantiated. There
just one instance of each trope. Now although
they are particulars, it's hard to say that
they are concrete. Take Mary's humanity:
of course Mary is a concrete thing, located
in a particular place in space and time,
but Mary's humanity? It sounds strange to
say that that is located at all; rather,
it's the type of thing she is, and it's just
strange to say that the type of thing she
is is located somewhere. Or take maybe a
better example: London is north of Paris;
so London's-being-north-of-Paris is a trope.
Right? It's a particular instance of "being-north-of."
But where is that particular relation? Is
it at London? At Paris? Somewhere in the
English Channel? That's just a strange question.
London's-being-north-of-Paris doesn't seem
to be a concrete thing at all. So even though
it is a particular, it is, we might say,
an abstract particular. The redness of this
apple is a particular, but it's not concrete
in the way that the apple is; so we say either
that this redness is a trope, or more descriptively,
that it is an abstract particular. "Trope"
and "abstract particular" are two
different names for the same category of
being.
So then the suggestion now is to say: tropes
exist; but universals do not exist, if conceived
of as something over and above tropes. So
the redness of the apple, the ball, and the
flower each exist; but there is not something
in addition to each of those things, some
ghostly redness in general, which is somehow
the same in each object. Now in saying that
tropes exist, we? re not quite done explaining
the resemblance theory, but that's an important
part of it. If the resemblance theory is
a solution to the problem of universals,
then we should still expect some answer to
questions like this: What is redness itself?
Surely we aren't saying that redness itself
is any specific instance of redness. Well
then, what is it?
Try out this answer: "If I am not allowed
to say that redness is any specific instance
of redness, then I can still say that redness
is the collection of all the particular instances
of redness. So the universal, redness, would
be a collection, of all the particular rednesses
in the world. And, by the same token, humanity
would be the collection of all the instances
of humanity in the world." Well, this
answer might fly, but we still have a problem.
It is the same problem that was visited upon
extreme nominalism: Sure, we can go ahead
and say that the collection of all the redness
tropes is what we mean by "redness in
general"; but why do we call apple,
the ball, and the flower all "red"?
We can say that each particular redness is
a trope, and that those tropes exist; but
why are they all tropes of redness as opposed
to any other property?
Well, here's a way to answer that question:
we say that these three tropes, the redness
of the apple, of the ball, and of the flower,
resemble each other. Moreover, we can simply
look at the three side-by-side and see the
individual colors, and see that the individual
colors resemble each other. Similarly in
the case of John, Mary, and Sally: the reason
we call all of them "humans" is
that their individual properties resemble
each other. So in general here's our theory:
types, properties, and relations are particular
attributes, or tropes, or abstract particulars,
of objects; tropes are capable of resembling
each other, and when a large number of tropes
do resemble each other, we each formulate
concepts and names which we use to apply
to all of the tropes on account of the resemblance
each of us sees. But nothing genuinely universal
exists; there are only (1) particulars including
objects and their tropes, and (2) particular
collections of tropes, and (3) particular
resemblances between particular tropes, or
between groups of tropes. These three existence
claims together make up the resemblance theory,
which could also be called the trope theory.
Notice how the resemblance theory is different
from Aristotle's theory. Aristotle said that
a universal is the same in each object; but
on the resemblance theory, each trope is
quite distinct from each other trope.
The reading goes on to discuss this theory,
but we are going to have to leave the discussion
there. A lot of philosophers these days do
find something like the resemblance theory
as presented here attractive. But trust me,
a lot more can be said on all sides. In fact,
it is not uncommon to find whole graduate-level
courses just on the problem of universals.
But onto the next problem.
One more thing about nominalism. There is
a type of nominalism -- ostrich nominalism
-- which has none of the problems of the
others. When asked 'What does one human have
in common with another that makes us called
them human?', the ostrich nominalist says
'Well, they have no entity in common, but
they are both human. That's why we call both
of them human.' This answer does not commit
him to universals. Someone may reply, 'ah,
but in virtue of what are they both human?'.
The ostrich says to this 'We cannot analyse
any further -- they're both human and that's
it'. This sounds right to me. |
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